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Ripple General Counsel Says US Dangerously Close to Losing Global Edge in Crypto and Blockchain Technology

source-logo  dailyhodl.com 18 November 2020 12:30, UTC

Ripple General Counsel, Stu Alderoty, says US regulators are dangerously close to pushing innovators out of the US.

In a new interview on The Ripple Drop, Alderoty points to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) tough stance on crypto assets other than Bitcoin and Ethereum as a deterrent for companies looking to create companies in the emerging industry.

“The risk of what’s going to happen [is] innovation in this space will not develop robustly in the US. Because if I’m a young innovator and I’m looking at the US regulatory landscape and I’m not really sure whether what I’m about to do is going to be considered good or bad, I probably say, ‘I don’t even want to start my project.’ So I never even start the innovation.

The other risk is, I take it and I say, ‘You know what? I’m going to go to Singapore. I’m going to go to Japan. I’m going to go to Switzerland. I’m going to go to the UK and I’m going to build my innovation there.'”

Alderoty points to early US policies on the internet as a model for how the blockchain and digital assets industries should be handled.

“Think about the mid 1990s when this thing called the internet started. Nobody knew how big it was going to get. Nobody knew its use cases. At the time, people said people are using it for either child pornography or they were using to have secret messages so they can engage in illicit activities.

But the US government basically said, ‘Look, this is a really new technology. We don’t understand it, but it seems to have this tremendous promise. So again, what we’re going to do is we’re going to allow this thing to flourish. We’re not going to not allow it to flourish in a way that’s really damaging. But we’re going to allow the innovation to flourish and not be suffocated by the regulation.’ And then look what we have. The US clearly is the leader in all things internet for the past 30 years.

And I think we are dangerously close in the US to losing that opportunity when it comes to blockchain technology and digital assets technology. And we’re going to potentially forgo it, if we haven’t already, to these other jurisdictions.”

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Featured Image: Shutterstock/NicoElNino

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