The U.S. Congress has new developments. This time, senators jointly introduced a bipartisan bill primarily aimed at tightening and coordinating the regulation of crypto scams at the federal level.
The core idea is to establish a federal task force dedicated to crypto scam cases—covering detection, tracking, and enforcement in an all-in-one approach. More importantly, this mechanism will bring together various regulatory agencies, break down information barriers, and enable data sharing and coordinated law enforcement.
In simple terms, it aims to make the U.S. anti-fraud efforts stronger and more efficient. For exchanges and users operating within a compliant framework, this means the regulatory system is gradually improving, and the overall industry ecosystem will become more transparent and secure.
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GasFeeCryer
· 12-17 08:34
The scammers are probably trembling, but can this really be implemented? That bureaucratic system in the US...
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LightningHarvester
· 12-17 08:33
Cross-party cooperation? This time it's for real. It seems the US is taking anti-fraud seriously.
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HackerWhoCares
· 12-17 08:33
Scammers better watch out, America is serious about this.
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ForkTongue
· 12-17 08:32
Hey, can this federal task force really crack down on those scammers? I'm skeptical...
One-stop service sounds good, but I'm worried it's just lip service, the same old story in the end.
Compliant exchanges are happy, but retail investors still need to be careful. No matter how strict the regulations are, scams can't be completely prevented.
Is this really different this time? Or is it the same old routine, with altcoins still soaring as usual?
Information sharing sounds impressive, but when it comes down to actually fighting, departments will probably just do their own thing.
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BoredApeResistance
· 12-17 08:29
Still doing this again, do you really think that those who cut leeks will obediently hand over their addresses?
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ZenChainWalker
· 12-17 08:16
Oh, now compliant exchanges are about to pop champagne, but I think those gray-area platforms are going to have a tough time.
The U.S. Congress has new developments. This time, senators jointly introduced a bipartisan bill primarily aimed at tightening and coordinating the regulation of crypto scams at the federal level.
The core idea is to establish a federal task force dedicated to crypto scam cases—covering detection, tracking, and enforcement in an all-in-one approach. More importantly, this mechanism will bring together various regulatory agencies, break down information barriers, and enable data sharing and coordinated law enforcement.
In simple terms, it aims to make the U.S. anti-fraud efforts stronger and more efficient. For exchanges and users operating within a compliant framework, this means the regulatory system is gradually improving, and the overall industry ecosystem will become more transparent and secure.