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by Lazare
3293 days ago
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> Do we really know what a "typical ICO" is at this stage? Yes, we can look at the ICOs that have happened and draw conclusions. > And as fast as the sector is changing, how do we know what will be typical by the time new legislation is
(a) passed This isn't about new legislation. The Howey Test dates from 1946. The fundamental characteristics of ICOs are not new (and have nothing to do with blockchains). > Many (typical?) ICOs are not companies I have no idea why you think this changes anything. It doesn't. > Which explicitly state that it is not an investment As I already mentioned, fine print doesn't fix the problems being discussed here. |
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You've selectively skipped over critical parts of my argu ment. But never mind... ;)
From your perspective, even in-game virtual limited-edition collectors items that might appreciate in value could be considered "securities". As would limited edition digital art work or, let's say, protected hashes of such works.
Or a limited gift voucher to purchase the first edition of a product funded by Kickstarter....
Basically you can try to draw conclusions of what a typical token crowd sale is or isn't at this stage, but -- at least in my view -- you would probably be jumping to a superficial conclusion.
> This isn't about new legislation. The Howey Test dates from 1946.
Which may or may not be suitable for technology developed and used in 2017, let alone 2018, 2019 or further down the road. So you're completely missing the point.
But if your only argument is that government authorities "could" interpret the law in the most aggressive way, few would argue.