
As interest in and use of blockchain accelerates this year, so do regulators’ fears, making them pay more attention to crypto exchanges.
Marc Powers is currently an adjunct professor at Florida International University College of Law, where he is teaching “Blockchain, Crypto and Regulatory Considerations.” He recently retired from practicing at an Am Law 100 law firm, where he built both its national securities litigation and regulatory enforcement practice team and its hedge fund industry practice. Marc started his legal career in the SEC’s Enforcement Division. During his 40 years in law, he was involved in representations including the Bernie Madoff Ponzi scheme, a recent presidential pardon and the Martha Stewart insider trading trial.
As interest in and use of blockchain accelerates this year, so do regulators’ fears, making them pay more attention to crypto exchanges.
Eleven class actions against crypto firms and their founders started with a bang and will end with a whimper — as they should.
The question is not whether Bitcoin will be the future of money; the question is how, where and when it will be the future of money.
Elon Musk, here we go again: It is not the first time his reckless tweeting has caused serious problems, but this time they’re for crypto.
I should know, I helped chase down $1 billion of his fraudulently-obtained cash.
A former SEC attorney argues that the agency is executing significant overreach in its case against Ripple and its executives Brad Garlinghouse and Chris Larsen.
Why is the U.S. dragging its heels on crypto and blockchain regulation, as the rest of the world forges ahead with financial innovation?
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