Blockstacks deal with Binance cheats charity, lies to regulators
Blockstacks paid Binance $250,000 to get listed, but they refuse to call it a listing fee, and that’s problematic.
Blockstacks paid Binance $250,000 to get listed, but they refuse to call it a listing fee, and that’s problematic.
Blockstack, the open-source decentralized computing platform, has been given permission by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to offer a cryptocurrency token.
The university, together with Lux Capital and Foundation Capital, has invested $11.5 million, purchasing 95.8 million Stacks tokens.
The move was confirmed in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), with the firm aiming to raise capital from a U.S. token issue through a subsidiary, Blockstack Token LLC.
Blockstack Token LLC announced that it has filed an offering statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to conduct a $50 million token offering using the SEC Regulation A+ framework.