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Coin Center

Coin Center

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Non-profit focused on the crypto policy

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Coin Center is a non-profit organization focused on the policy issues surrounding cryptocurrencies. They conduct research, educate policymakers, and advocate for reasonable regulatory approaches to this technology.

Event-related news

U.S. House Ways and Means Committee Introduces Six Cryptocurrency Tax Bills; Hearing Held Today

According to reporter Eleanor Terrett, the U.S. House Committee on Ways and Means held a hearing on cryptocurrency taxation at 2 p.m. local time on June 9, unveiling six standalone bills and one discussion draft ahead of the hearing. The six bills address cryptocurrency donations, taxation of mining and staking, reporting requirements, tax treatment parity, voluntary disclosure, and the application of existing anti-abuse tax rules to digital assets; the discussion draft targets offshore cryptocurrency tax avoidance. The Committee stated that these proposals aim to bring clarity, fairness, and operational feasibility to digital assets while safeguarding the United States’ position as the world’s leading hub for cryptocurrency. Witnesses at the hearing included representatives from Fidelity, Coinbase, Coin Center, and the NYU Tax Law Center.

Coin Center: Code Should Be Protected by the First Amendment, Developers Should Not Be Held Liable for Its Use

Odaily News Coin Center released a report stating that cryptocurrency software code constitutes "functional speech" and should be protected under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The organization argues that writing and publishing code is akin to writing a book or publishing a recipe; developers are "expressers and inventors," not custodians of assets or intermediaries.The report points out that the mere act of publishing and maintaining software should be strictly protected. However, when developers directly control user assets, execute transactions on behalf of users, or make decisions for users, they may enter a realm subject to regulation.This statement comes at a time of increasing regulatory controversy. Coin Center emphasized that developers should not be treated as financial intermediaries for the convenience of law enforcement. It calls for upholding existing free speech principles in the context of new technologies, rather than expanding the boundaries of criminal liability. (Cointelegraph)

Related news

U.S. House Ways and Means Committee Introduces Six Cryptocurrency Tax Bills; Hearing Held Today

According to reporter Eleanor Terrett, the U.S. House Committee on Ways and Means held a hearing on cryptocurrency taxation at 2 p.m. local time on June 9, unveiling six standalone bills and one discussion draft ahead of the hearing. The six bills address cryptocurrency donations, taxation of mining and staking, reporting requirements, tax treatment parity, voluntary disclosure, and the application of existing anti-abuse tax rules to digital assets; the discussion draft targets offshore cryptocurrency tax avoidance. The Committee stated that these proposals aim to bring clarity, fairness, and operational feasibility to digital assets while safeguarding the United States’ position as the world’s leading hub for cryptocurrency. Witnesses at the hearing included representatives from Fidelity, Coinbase, Coin Center, and the NYU Tax Law Center.

Coin Center: Code Should Be Protected by the First Amendment, Developers Should Not Be Held Liable for Its Use

Odaily News Coin Center released a report stating that cryptocurrency software code constitutes "functional speech" and should be protected under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The organization argues that writing and publishing code is akin to writing a book or publishing a recipe; developers are "expressers and inventors," not custodians of assets or intermediaries.The report points out that the mere act of publishing and maintaining software should be strictly protected. However, when developers directly control user assets, execute transactions on behalf of users, or make decisions for users, they may enter a realm subject to regulation.This statement comes at a time of increasing regulatory controversy. Coin Center emphasized that developers should not be treated as financial intermediaries for the convenience of law enforcement. It calls for upholding existing free speech principles in the context of new technologies, rather than expanding the boundaries of criminal liability. (Cointelegraph)