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The trick to understanding the crypto and blockchain space is tracking the right thought leaders and subject matter experts. It is a very close-knit, passionate community of pioneers, evangelists, and early adopters who have been reporting on and sticking with their overall perspective that–over time–crypto is a strategic game-changer in the storage of value, value creation, and exchange of value globally. Long term, the conventional wisdom within this community is that the traditional notion of “money” is on the ropes – ripe for the radical disruption many industries and societal conventions experienced during Web 2.0. Blockchain is also significant over time in areas such as supply chain transparency, asset tracking, digital data ownership, digital sovereignty, and use cases in a sophisticated variety of industry verticals.
OODA has been a member of this community throughout this early stage innovation and evolutionary process, garnering insights from OODAcast conversations with pioneer investors in the asset class such as Bradley Rotter and DeFi journalist and author Camila Russo. In his interview with Bradley Rotter, OODA CEO Matt Devost shares that he wishes he would have kept up and running the crypto mining hardware he set up many years ago (as a demonstration for the class he was teaching at Georgetown at the time). Suffice it to say, OODA has had its sleeves rolled up, monitoring this disruptive and promising technology since its inception.
“…the positions and terms for each depositor and lender are verifiable on the blockchains they run atop.”
An equal and opposite reaction to the recent onslaught of cybersecurity incidents directed at the Crypto and DeFi marketplace (itemized in our recently released Web3 Cyber Incident Database) are regulatory or market mechanisms designed to enhance the trust relationship between end-users, federal regulators, and the crypto platforms during this evolutionary phase of the Web3 innovation ecosystem.
The recent SEC action against crypto lender BlockFi has been heralded by many in the DeFi innovation community as a seminal moment for the cryptocurrency marketplace. According to the SEC filing:
This all amounts to a misrepresentation of risk by BlockFi to its investors, including their inability to cover deposits in the case of run assets and deposits, for which the SEC is coming down on BlockFi using tried and true regulatory mechanisms which date back to the 1930s.
As reported by Axios: “This is the largest-ever penalty against a cryptocurrency firm and the first in which a crypto company was charged with violating the registration provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940.”
BlockFi is not alone, as last year Coinbase was also threatened with an SEC Lawsuit over their lending products.
Camila Russo’s website, The Defiant, offers some of the best DeFi coverage. The Defiant’s Brady Dale highlighted in his reportage the most important takeaway of this entire development in the DeFi space: “The SEC findings illuminate one of the key differences between centralized financial offerings and those made through decentralized finance lending and saving platforms, where the positions and terms for each depositor and lender are verifiable on the blockchains they run atop.” It is this disintermediation of verification mechanisms and a trusted, collective verification mechanism by way of blockchain which is the core disruptive innovation of the crypto and DeFi ecosystem. That core element of the technology is in no way called into question by this SEC action.
“Both the SEC and state-level agreements contain no admission or denial of wrongdoing or liability.”
1/11 HUGE day for @BlockFi and our interest-bearing product, the BIA. We’ve reached a resolution with both the SEC and state regulators that identifies a clear path forward for folks to earn interest on their crypto. My POV below.
— Zac Prince (@CostSegZac) February 14, 2022
The SEC action sets an important precedent for the crypto and DeFi marketplace: with BlockFi’s cooperation in the investigation and commitment to abide by the settlement, crypto lending accounts are now classified as securities by the SEC, with all the regulation that securities registration entails.
What is important here is the reaction of both BlockFI and the DeFi community to this action by the SEC. The news cycle on this development is not one of tension between a DeFi market that has a maverick, hacker-esque ethos (that is too opaque and at odds with the traditional monetary system). This perception of the space lingers for some reason. The reality is quite the contrary. Innovators in the space are vocal in their response to the SEC filing that, finally, the traditional fiscal and monetary policy decision-makers and regulators will understand the DeFi marketplace has always called for further clear and transparent SEC guidelines. The response to the SEC action has not been a contentious or negative response on social media.
BlockFi’s language in its press release, on the matter -“BlockFi Enters Landmark Resolution with Federal and State Regulators Providing Clarity on Pathway for Crypto Interest Securities” – is not some half-hearted public relations stunt trying to turn a negative into a positive. Rather, they clarify the progress the resolution represents for the entire industry, such as:
“Some people won’t like the outcome, but that is one of the risks that come with seeking regulatory clarity.”
https://oodaloop.com/archive/2022/02/16/web3-cyber-incident-database/
Now more than ever, organizations need to apply rigorous thought to business risks and opportunities. In doing so it is useful to understand the concepts embodied in the terms Black Swan and Gray Rhino. See: Potential Future Opportunities, Risks and Mitigation Strategies in the Age of Continuous Crisis
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