A federal judge ruled that the Ripple Labs Inc. token is a security when sold to institutional investors but not the general public, granting a partial win to the SEC in a long-awaited decision that could help determine the future of crypto regulation.
So, it moves the responsibility from Ripple Labs Inc to the institutional investors who bought the token from them and acted as underwriters to general public?<p>Since institutional investors are by definition acredited, so it was OK for Ripple Labs Inc to sell securities to them.<p>Also, the court decision completely ignores the fact that so called "exchanges" are by themselves are illegal (or unregulated in the best case), and act as Broker/Dealers.<p>Since these platforms are unregulated, it's impossible to know how their orderbooks operated, and what was the amount of the wash trading there.<p>The same logic applies to almost any financial contract or security trading on the real exchanges (except IPOs).
This thread sees it as big rebuke to Gensler and big win for Ripple and other alt-coins:<p><a href="https://twitter.com/adamscochran/status/1679515811344523267" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://twitter.com/adamscochran/status/1679515811344523267</a>