#稳定币发展趋势 Seeing the article on virtual currency judicial disposal on Justice Network, my mind immediately flashed back to the cases I have experienced over the years. From the early days of exchange collapses to later asset seizures involving various cases, each time was a process of exploration, each time teaching us what true "institutionalization" really means.
The multiple judicial disposal pathways proposed this time essentially summarize the pitfalls we have stepped into over the past decade. I remember a few years ago, once virtual assets were involved in cases, the common approach was to freeze or destroy them simply and roughly, and no one could clearly say what the lost value was. Now, introducing compliant third-party institutions for on-chain tracking and secure custody seems like a small change, but it actually reflects the industry's shift from wild growth to institutionalization.
What impressed me most was the change in attitude towards stablecoins. A few years ago, stablecoins were a sensitive word domestically, but now the article explicitly mentions "exploring the return of original coins under compliance," which indicates that regulators have begun to differentiate between different types of assets and tailor policies accordingly. This refined approach is precisely a sign of a mature market. Compared to the era of one-size-fits-all policies, this is real progress.
But honestly, what I value more is the mention of "supervision by prosecutorial authorities throughout the entire process" and "standardization of technology and procedures." The vitality of a system depends on consistent enforcement. If these two points can be truly implemented, the judicial disposal of virtual assets can evolve from case-by-case exploration to systematic operation. This is also the key to whether stablecoins can survive within a compliant framework—not the coins themselves, but the institutional environment surrounding them.
People who have experienced many cycles understand that the projects that ultimately survive are never the most technically advanced, but those that best adapt to the legal framework. This time’s institutional improvements may seem very "policy-oriented," but for projects that truly want to survive long-term, it actually provides a way out.
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#稳定币发展趋势 Seeing the article on virtual currency judicial disposal on Justice Network, my mind immediately flashed back to the cases I have experienced over the years. From the early days of exchange collapses to later asset seizures involving various cases, each time was a process of exploration, each time teaching us what true "institutionalization" really means.
The multiple judicial disposal pathways proposed this time essentially summarize the pitfalls we have stepped into over the past decade. I remember a few years ago, once virtual assets were involved in cases, the common approach was to freeze or destroy them simply and roughly, and no one could clearly say what the lost value was. Now, introducing compliant third-party institutions for on-chain tracking and secure custody seems like a small change, but it actually reflects the industry's shift from wild growth to institutionalization.
What impressed me most was the change in attitude towards stablecoins. A few years ago, stablecoins were a sensitive word domestically, but now the article explicitly mentions "exploring the return of original coins under compliance," which indicates that regulators have begun to differentiate between different types of assets and tailor policies accordingly. This refined approach is precisely a sign of a mature market. Compared to the era of one-size-fits-all policies, this is real progress.
But honestly, what I value more is the mention of "supervision by prosecutorial authorities throughout the entire process" and "standardization of technology and procedures." The vitality of a system depends on consistent enforcement. If these two points can be truly implemented, the judicial disposal of virtual assets can evolve from case-by-case exploration to systematic operation. This is also the key to whether stablecoins can survive within a compliant framework—not the coins themselves, but the institutional environment surrounding them.
People who have experienced many cycles understand that the projects that ultimately survive are never the most technically advanced, but those that best adapt to the legal framework. This time’s institutional improvements may seem very "policy-oriented," but for projects that truly want to survive long-term, it actually provides a way out.