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7) The core goal of the bill is to regulate *centralized* crypto venues. The main *DeFi* touchpoint is: *how can a regulated centralized entity interface with DeFi?*
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8) In particular, it is *not* making claims about what DeFi devs, smart contracts, and validators must do. It’s looking to eventually establish guidelines about how e.g. FTX’s platform--or Fidelity's--could interface with DeFi contracts.
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9) This gets right what the infrastructure bill a while ago got wrong: that devs and validators aren’t platforms, and shouldn’t be regulated as such. Which is a huge step forward! But again we’ll have to see the final language; I’d only support a version that gets this right.
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10) The most surprising thing is how constructive and receptive the lawmakers are to everyone's feedback--including the DeFi community; it’s one of the reasons I’m optimistic about the bill. Granted, we’ll have to see the final language.
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11) One thing that may ultimately be required centralized entities like FTX: there are likely to be disclosure/etc. requirements, and potentially “customer suitability tests” of some sort. It’s really important that this is done in an equitable way.
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12) Historically, these have been a toxic combination of wealth tests and variants on ‘do you have a fax machine’ that are highly exclusionary towards the poor, minorities, and rural investors. It’s bad to gate building wealth on having wealth.
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13) Instead, they should drive at the core question: Does the customer fully understand the product and its risks? Are they making an informed decision? If you’re going to gate products on regulated exchanges, do it on understanding, not wealth.
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15) (Also I thought the section on hacking was interesting and going to be one of the more controversial ones. Boy was I wrong about that. But either way I think the 5-5 standard would help give people a lot more confidence and comfort! And save people a lot of money.)
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16)On sanctions: a) validators and smart contracts need to be free, permissionless, and decentralized b) we should have tooling to make screening easier and quicker c) I have sympathy for innocent people caught in broader blocks—that’s a policy conversation worth having
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Replying to
18)While I don’t myself wear glasses, I’m excited to join our bespectacled brethren. It’s a huge honor to see the passion and intensity with which Bitboy regards me. Maybe someday I’ll feel as strongly about something as he does about me.
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Replying to
Would like to hear your opinion about AMM vs RFQ models in DeFi. Like users prefer to get better quotes without slippage and frontrunning. But they should trust <centralized> MMs who operates their funds. So, RFQ is something that will replace AMM or no?
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Crypto and blockchain was invented to remove middleman as you want to establish in crypto. DeFi will win you and your evil agenda. Money will not buy anything. If every crypto person stop using your CEX you will go bankrupt. The regulation should be simple on/off ramp.
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