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Government United States

New York AG Orders Two Unregistered Crypto Lenders To Shut Down (axios.com) 26

New York Attorney General Letitia James on Monday ordered two unregistered cryptocurrency lending platforms to cease operating in the state within 10 days and requested three other platforms to send her office information about their activities and products. From a report: Due in part to a lack of clear regulations, crypto companies have been making various moves -- and finding out that not all regulators agree with them. James' office argued that virtual currency lending products are considered securities under the state's Martin Act, which requires companies offering such financial services to register with the attorney general's office in order to do business with New Yorkers.
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New York AG Orders Two Unregistered Crypto Lenders To Shut Down

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  • It's a bit annoying the respective lenders are not publicly named. To prevent collapse???
  • This is why Satoshi Nakamoto is still anonymous. A legal crush is coming, and the shrapnel could fly in any direction.

    • https://www.getmonero.org/ [getmonero.org]
      https://dero.io/ [dero.io]
      https://www.equilibria.network... [www.equilibria.network]

      Crypto is routing around government interference with anonymous, decentralised, secure crypto projects. Monero is a currency, Dero handles smart contracts and Equilibria will handle oracles for real world data.

      With privacy, the government will no longer be able to interfere as they will not know who to send the letters to.

      • With privacy, the government will no longer be able to interfere as they will not know who to send the letters to.

        It's easy: you arrest the person who converts it into cash.

        Long term, I think the government has no chance to stop crypto-currency, but that doesn't mean they won't try. They went hard after Timothy Leary just because he was a figurehead, now MJ is becoming legal. Satoshi Nakamoto would be the same, and ambitious prosecutors would pat themselves on the back for figuring out a way to throw him in jail.

      • by whitroth ( 9367 )

        "Interfere". As I said, above, it's bastards like you who pretend that you don't make use of things that taxes pay for - the roads, clean water, etc, and so you refuse to pay taxes.

        I hope they catch you and jail you.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      This is why Satoshi Nakamoto is still anonymous. A legal crush is coming, and the shrapnel could fly in any direction.

      Indeed. To anybody with half a clue, this is no surprise whatsoever. The only surprise is how long it took. But it looks like the ransomware criminals overplayed their hand significantly recently and focused more attention on themselves as is healthy. The usual story of greed and stupidity. They probably though they were criminal masterminds, but they are just the same losers that never managed to get large enough with their criminal business model before they made themselves more than a mere annoyance and

      • The only surprise is how long it took.

        That is true, I thought it would go down in 2015 or so.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          The only surprise is how long it took.

          That is true, I thought it would go down in 2015 or so.

          Same here.

  • Stuff like this is why pretty much no business should operate in either CA or NY, the whole effort of government in either state either being to tax the hell out of you or rough you up for having the temerity to run a business there and provide value to people.

    • Stuff like this is why pretty much no business should operate in either CA or NY, the whole effort of government in either state either being to tax the hell out of you or rough you up for having the temerity to run a business there and provide value to people.

      Sure, it's only CA or NY which require businesses to be registered to operate. No other state in the country requires businesses to be registered and adhere to certain rules and regulations. None whatosever.

    • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
      I doubt the AJ has any beef with people operating financialk services (as in, but not limited, lending of any kind) as long as they are registered an indeed regulated as firms providing such services. What the AJ objects to is unregulated entities providing said services to the general public and maybe even presenting them selves as their regulated equivalents. But I'm just guessing here. I'm leaving the issue of taxes for later since that is obviously a rather inflammatory subject, and might rather quick
    • "no business should operate in either CA or NY"

      True. They should operate in TX or FL where businesses have the freedom to makes decisions and operate as they wish. ...As long as they don't require customers to wear masks or employees to take vaccines during a pandemic that shut commerce down and killed more Americans that WWI & WWII combined.

Business is a good game -- lots of competition and minimum of rules. You keep score with money. -- Nolan Bushnell, founder of Atari

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