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Crypto’s Inevitable Domination: Why the SEC’s Crackdown is Already Too Late

Crypto’s Inevitable Domination: Why the SEC’s Crackdown is Already Too Late

Author:
Newsbtc
Published:
2025-08-08 03:00:53
15
3

The SEC's regulatory hammer swings—but crypto just yawns and keeps building.

Decentralization wins again

While Washington debates paperwork, Bitcoin miners are stacking sats and DeFi protocols are eating traditional finance's lunch. The numbers don't lie: $2.3T market cap, 400M+ users worldwide, and zero fucks given about bureaucratic posturing.

Wall Street's worst nightmare

JP Morgan can keep its 19th-century ledger technology. Real assets move at internet speed now—settling in minutes, crossing borders like email, and paying higher yields than your banker's golf club stories.

The closer that'll trigger SEC lawyers

Regulators aren't protecting investors—they're protecting obsolete middlemen. Too bad code doesn't care about compliance meetings.

Why Ban Is Off The Table

According to Bloomberg columnist Matt Levine, outright banning crypto is off the table. He points out that tens of millions of people own digital assets today.

Pulling the plug now would Ripple through trading platforms, payment apps, and even major Wall Street firms. Levine argues that such a move would simply drive innovation and jobs offshore.

Hostile Past Still Looms

Under former SEC Chair Gary Gensler, most tokens were treated as stocks. That meant they needed to register under securities laws—a process that almost no project could clear.

In practice, that stance rendered crypto “illegal” in the US. Many developers and investors felt shut out.

Matt Levine: “We will ban crypto” is no longer feasible for the SEC, and “we will ignore crypto because it’s not a security so not our problem” is not very attractive for the SEC. The only choice left is “we will regulate crypto, but in a way that you like. pic.twitter.com/hBFXTmMnh5

— Sar Haribhakti (@sarthakgh) August 7, 2025

According to analysts, crypto serves two purposes: it powers networks and it offers investment chances. That split role creates regulatory headaches.

Many tokens act much like shares in a company, yet they also run on open software and community rules. The SEC knows how to protect stock investors, but digital coins need different safeguards.

Project Crypto Signals Change

Current SEC Chair Paul Atkins launched “Project Crypto” this year. The goal is to carve out faster, clearer paths for token registration.

Projects that truly function as securities could follow a new, streamlined process. At the same time, tokens used mainly for network services would face lighter requirements.

Levine warns that drawing clear lines won’t be easy. How do you tell a governance token from a pure utility token? What level of disclosure makes sense when code can update itself overnight?

Those questions will test regulators and industry alike. However, having defined categories would guide honest developers and protect small investors.

The SEC now faces a clear choice: use its power, but adapt its toolkit. A full ban would leave retail holders stranded. Total hands-off would leave them exposed to fraud.

Featured image from Meta, chart from TradingView

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