Crypto exchange Kraken has responded to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission’s claim that it had violated federal securities laws.
In the legal filing dated Sept. 12, the crypto exchange denied the SEC’s allegations, stating that the assets the regulator cited did not meet the legal definition of securities.
Kraken stated in the filing that it did not violate “Sections 5, 15(a) and 17A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934” because the cited assets were “not securities or investment contracts.”
The assets cited in the SEC’s allegations included Solana’s SOL (SOL), Cardano’s ADA (ADA), Algorand’s ALGO (ALGO), Cosmos’ ATOM (ATOM), Filecoin (FIL), Polygon’s MATIC (MATIC) and five others.
Brazil lifts freeze on Starlink- and X-related bank accounts after $3 million fine payment
On Sept. 13, the Brazilian Supreme Court lifted a freeze on bank accounts tied to Elon Musk’s Starlink and social media platform X after the funds were transferred to the national treasury.
The $18.35 Brazilian reals, worth around $3.3 million US dollars, are linked to a legal dispute involving the social media platform’s failure to comply with court orders.
Brazil’s Supreme Court had ordered X to block accounts accused of spreading misinformation and hate speech, previously classifying the content as threatening democracy.
On Sept. 12, Brazil’s Attorney General’s Office argued that the suspension of X does not violate free speech rights and that the lawsuits against the X ban lacked legal grounds.
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UK government introduces bill to clarify crypto’s legal status
On Sept. 11, the United Kingdom government introduced legislation that enables the assessment of whether Bitcoin (BTC) and other cryptocurrencies can be deemed “personal property.”
The government announced that the Property Bill would clarify the legal status of non-fungible tokens (NFTs), cryptocurrencies and carbon credits.
Labour MP and Minister of State Heidi Alexander explained that the new legislation could help…
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