A key executive from one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges has backed decentralised protocols, adding open-source code and smart contracts were the “ultimate form of disclosure.”
In a blog post, Coinbase chief executive Brian Armstrong advocated tightening regulations on centralised platforms. He also outlined steps government regulators could take to reinstate trust in the crypto industry amid the ongoing FTX crisis.
In the post, he said:
“Second, smart contracts, which power DeFi and Web3 apps, are public and open source by default. This means anyone can go audit the code to see if it really does what it claims to do. This is the ultimate form of disclosure. Instead of ‘don’t be evil’ [we] can have ‘can’t be evil’, where you can trust the laws of math instead of human beings.”
A List of Recommendations
According to the executive, the industry needed “additional transparency and disclosure” to counter human error and fiscal malfeasance. Armstrong continued that the fall of disgraced crypto exchange FTX would “be the catalyst we need to finally get new legislation passed.”
He added that US lawmakers should pass stablecoin regulations to build standard financial service laws, where regulators could monitor implementing a state trust charter or similar mandate.
Stablecoin issuers should also meet “basic cybersecurity standards” and offer blacklisting [procedures] to comply with global sanctions regimes, he said.
Also, one major bill from US senator Bill Hagarty, the Stablecoin Transparency Act, is set to pass the Senate in the near future. Armstrong recommended targeting crypto exchanges and custodians with federally-sanctioned licencing and registration.
This would take place after Congress passed sufficient stablecoin regulation, according to the CEO. He also urged lawmakers to force the US Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodities Future Trading Commission (CFTC) to sort the world’s top 100 crypto coins by market capitalisation and label them as securities or commodities.
Continuing, Armstrong stated: “If asset issuers disagree with the analysis, the courts can settle the edge cases, but this would serve as an important labelled data set for the rest of the industry to follow, as, ultimately, millions of crypto assets will be created.”
Foreign Sources, Domestic Consequences
He also called on regulators to determine how crypto exchanges from foreign sources operated in their respective subsidy branches worldwide.
He said: “If you are a country who is going to publish laws that all cryptocurrency companies need to follow, then you need to enforce them not just domestically but also with companies abroad who are serving your citizens.”
Concluding, Armstrong wrote,
“Don’t take that company’s word for it. Actually go check if they are targeting your citizens while claiming not to […] If you don’t have the authority to prevent that activity […] you will unintentionally be incentivizing companies to serve your country from offshore.”
The news comes as global regulators determine the next steps against cryptocurrencies amid the ongoing bankruptcy and prosecution of FTX and its executives. Currently, Bahamian authorities have detained FTX’s ex-chief executive Sam Bankman-Fried and may extradite him to the US.
Numerous countries, including Australia, South Korea, Israel, the United States, and others have begun developing recommendations for regulating cryptocurrency markets. The plans come amid a volatile bear market, which has seen numerous exchanges collapse due to fraudulent or mishandling of funding.