Kurt Wuckert Jr. talks BSV, Bitcoin civil war and Craig Wright on Cash Daddies podcast
CoinGeek’s Chief Bitcoin Historian joined the Cash Daddies podcast to talk about why BSV will gobble up all the other chains and calls out scams in the space.
CoinGeek’s Chief Bitcoin Historian joined the Cash Daddies podcast to talk about why BSV will gobble up all the other chains and calls out scams in the space.
Ripple Labs is under fire after the U.S. securities regulator accused the company of undermining a regulatory probe into whether the XRP token is an unregistered security.
Beleaguered cryptocurrency exchange Binance has lost yet another U.K. mainstream payment on-ramp while Ripple execs seek to force Binance to expose its trading data to U.S. securities regulators.
Based on the legal test for determining whether something is a security or not (Howey), the SEC has a case. However, in filing its defense, Ripple Labs made an excellent point worthy of discussion.
The payments company is seeking to prove that the XRP sales its executives made were beyond the jurisdiction of the U.S. watchdog.
A New York judge ruled against the securities regulator’s motion to access the Ripple’s memos through which it sought to prove that the payments company knew XRP was a security.
Judge Sarah Netburn granted a motion to dismiss the SEC request, which would have required Ripple’s Brad Garlinghouse and Chris Larsen to divulge their personal financial records to the court.
Ripple Labs has recorded two small victories in the ongoing U.S. Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) lawsuit.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is asking the court to stop a motion by Ripple executives to deny it access to their personal financial records.
The U.S.’s expanding offensive on digital asset players should be a clear signal that existing regulatory structures apply to the digital asset ecosystem.
Some 6,000 investors in XRP argued they were not being sufficiently represented during the legal proceedings brought against the firm by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission wants a federal court to grant it access to the personal finance records of Ripple’s executives.