The recently released information has attracted quite a bit of attention. SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce recently revealed that the SEC's crypto working group plans to visit Miami before January 27th to have face-to-face conversations with frontline crypto builders.
This move may seem simple, but it reflects a clear shift in the US's approach to crypto regulation. In the past, the SEC's approach was basically—let projects run first, and punish them afterward if issues arose. That "post-enforcement" logic was convenient, but it also caused a lot of friction and opposition.
The new approach is different. Actively listening to builders' real ideas and aligning regulatory and industry demands before policies are finalized is more like a collaborative attitude. Moving from "settling scores later" to "pre-communication" is at least a positive signal for the entire crypto ecosystem.
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GateUser-c802f0e8
· 01-08 13:24
Wait, Hester Peirce is going to Miami? Finally someone wants to have a proper chat instead of just swinging a big stick right away.
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GasWhisperer
· 01-08 00:12
hmm interesting timing... miami trip before the feds finalize policy? feels like watching mempool patterns before a major dump. sec finally learning to ask before they swing the hammer? tbh skeptical but the data points upward rn. cooperation > enforcement theater, at least theoretically. let's see if this actually moves the needle or just vibes
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GamefiEscapeArtist
· 01-07 20:52
Finally, someone is willing to sit down and have a proper conversation, which is much better than constantly suing.
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ForkTongue
· 01-07 20:43
Wait, is Hester Peirce about to change the direction? Pre-communication vs. post-penalty sounds great, but I can't quite believe it.
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DevChive
· 01-07 20:26
Huh? The SEC is really starting to win people's hearts. The previous approach of settling scores in the autumn truly hurt everyone.
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GasFeeAssassin
· 01-07 20:23
Finally, someone is willing to have a proper chat. Much better than the previous revenge scheme. See you in Miami.
The recently released information has attracted quite a bit of attention. SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce recently revealed that the SEC's crypto working group plans to visit Miami before January 27th to have face-to-face conversations with frontline crypto builders.
This move may seem simple, but it reflects a clear shift in the US's approach to crypto regulation. In the past, the SEC's approach was basically—let projects run first, and punish them afterward if issues arose. That "post-enforcement" logic was convenient, but it also caused a lot of friction and opposition.
The new approach is different. Actively listening to builders' real ideas and aligning regulatory and industry demands before policies are finalized is more like a collaborative attitude. Moving from "settling scores later" to "pre-communication" is at least a positive signal for the entire crypto ecosystem.