Unsurprisingly, the Bitcoin Halving is when Bitcoin’s mining reward is split in half. Halvings occur about every four years; four years because the Bitcoin mining algo is set with a target of finding new blocks once every 10 minutes (more or less; on average 9.66 minutes), which would take about 1,409 days to mine the … Continue reading The Hype Surrounding the April 2024 Bitcoin Halving
Category: Tech/IP Law
The Big Twelve: Crypto
As the weather begins to chill in November, the College Football Playoff race heats up. This year, the race, along with the last few years, has sported changes regarding what schools are playing sports where. In fact, seven of ten Football Bowl Subdivision conferences have or will undergo membership changes. Somewhat similar, but somewhat different, … Continue reading The Big Twelve: Crypto
The Aussie Attempt At Regulating Crypto Service Providers and Exchanges
Through the unveiling of its “Regulating digital asset platforms” consultation paper, the Australian Treasury has indicated its intent to regulate service providers and exchanges. In particular, regulating service providers and exchanges as opposed to individual coins or cryptocurrencies themselves is, in the Treasury’s view, said to (1) address consumer harms and (2) support innovation in … Continue reading The Aussie Attempt At Regulating Crypto Service Providers and Exchanges
SEC Defers Decisions on Six ETF Applications
Update oncourters, today is no longer the day the SEC will decide on all the spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) applications filed by applicants earlier this year; the SEC has now delayed making a decision to October. Such applicants include BlackRock, WisdomTree, Invesco Galaxy, Wise Origin, VanEck, Bitwise, and Valkyrie Digital Assets. The delay means … Continue reading SEC Defers Decisions on Six ETF Applications
The Salvation from the Crypto Winter: Appeals Court Rules SEC Must Review Grayscale’s ETF Bid
On August 29th, 2023, after previous rejection, an appeals court held that the SEC must review Grayscale’s ETF bid. Specifically, the court noted the SEC's decision to reject the Grayscale Bitcoin ETF application was "arbitrary and capricious" in its ruling. As per the filings, See https://www.docdroid.net/vrehbKf/dc-cir-22-1142-01208547571-0-pdf, the court hereby ordered Grayscale's petition for review to … Continue reading The Salvation from the Crypto Winter: Appeals Court Rules SEC Must Review Grayscale’s ETF Bid
Recents . . . in crypto!
US: Visa is under scrutiny by the DOJ given its methods of charging merchants for technology it uses to protect cardholder information. Specifically, Visa, as it currently stands, charges cardholders more if they fail to use Visa’s exclusive technology; this, in turn, raises serious regulatory concerns as the DOJ seeks to address. ARGENTINA: Pro Bitcoin … Continue reading Recents . . . in crypto!
Reflecting on The Ripple Wave of Litigation
07/13/23 -> SEC v. Ripple: On July 13th, Judge Analisa Torres of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled on cross-motions for summary judgment filed by the SEC and Ripple Labs (the company closely associated with XRP) in relation to litigation that dates back to December 2020. Specifically, Judge … Continue reading Reflecting on The Ripple Wave of Litigation
Triple Threat in Tech: Twitter, Threads, and Trade Secrets
Twitter has threatened to sue Meta Platforms (META.O), under a trade secret cause of action, for its new Threads platform in a letter sent to Facebook parent's CEO Mark Zuckerberg by Twitter's lawyer Alex Spiro. Twitter claims that Meta hired “dozens” of ex-Twitter employees with access to Twitter’s trade secrets to develop Threads and thus … Continue reading Triple Threat in Tech: Twitter, Threads, and Trade Secrets
The SEC is Kraken Down
The SEC’s approach—regulation by enforcement—towards regulating the uncharted crypto sphere is one of the few seemingly predictable aspects of crypto. Continuing its approach of regulation by enforcement, the SEC has charged crypto exchange Kraken for conducting an illegal unregistered securities offering through its staking-as-a-service (SaaS) program. Staking-as-a-service is essentially when a trusted staking provider lets … Continue reading The SEC is Kraken Down
Legal Liability for DAOs
A decentralized autonomous organization, or DAO, is a blockchain-based form of organization or company that is often governed by a native crypto token. Holders of these tokens gain the ability to vote on important matters directly related to the DAO. DAOs typically use smart contracts to coordinate the efforts and resources of many towards common … Continue reading Legal Liability for DAOs
