Article 93 of the draft treaty would require all nations that sign the treaty to implement onerous financial surveillance laws for cryptocurrency. Those financial surveillance laws would apply to any organization “engaged in activities related to the circulation of digital financial assets and digital currency,” even if they are nothing like a traditional financial institution. Like the dangerously broad Digital Asset Anti-Money Laundering Act introduced in the U.S. Senate, this incredibly broad language could be interpreted to include software developers, custodial and self-hosted wallet providers, miners, validators, nodes, non-fungible token non-fungible token (NFT) trading platforms and even users.
Related posts
-
HBAR and AAVE Lead Top Altcoin Gainers, Vote-to-Earn Crypto Flockerz Could Rally Next
The crypto market has been indecisive over the past... -
FBI and Other Federal Agencies Identify Hacker Behind $308,000,000 Hack of DMM Crypto Exchange
North Korean hackers stole $308 million in Bitcoin (BTC) from Japanese cryptocurrency exchange DMM in May... -
Nearly 30% of crypto trends focused on meme coins in 2024, survey shows
2024 has seen a dramatic surge in interest in meme coins, with almost a third of...