US lawmakers should take steps to bring crypto-related activities into the regulated financial system, while also developing a “national policy for a decentralized Web 3” as they did for Web 1 in the 1990s, Brian Brooks, CEO of Bitcoin (BTC) mining firm Bitfury, wrote in a testimony ahead of a hearing at the House Financial Services Committee today.
He's one of the six executives that testified at the Digital Assets and the Future of Finance: Understanding the Challenges and Benefits of Financial Innovation in the United States hearing. Others were Jeremy Allaire, Co-Founder, Chairman and CEO of Circle, Samuel Bankman-Fried, Founder and CEO of FTX, Charles Cascarilla, CEO and co-Founder of Paxos Trust Company, Denelle Dixon CEO and Executive Director of the Stellar Development Foundation, and Alesia Jeanne Haas, CEO of Coinbase Inc. and CFO of Coinbase Global Inc.
Watch the hearing here:
“[…] a national policy agenda that takes crypto compliance seriously should assess whether it makes more sense to continue to keep crypto activities largely out of the regulated financial system,” Brian Brooks wrote.
He added that bringing these players into a more regulated environment would also ensure that they can be supervised properly, including mechanisms to make sure companies are operating at “appropriate levels of risk management.”
Brooks further stressed that a national policy should be adopted to facilitate the emergence of a “decentralized Web 3 powered by cryptoassets.”
Instead of focusing on “micro questions” like what is and what is not a security, legislators should ask themselves whether they believe “a user-controlled decentralized Internet is better than an Internet largely controlled by five big companies,” the former regulator-turned bitcoin mining boss said.As his final key point, Brooks suggested that lawmakers should also consider the risks that exist in the current financial system when they develop a new crypto policy, saying that during his tenure alone as Comptroller of the Currency, almost USD 1bn in penalties were issued to banks and bank executives.
“Shouldn’t we take seriously the possibility that algorithms and open source software that take a measure of human error, greed, negligence, fraud, and bias out of the system might make the system better on net even if there are some new risks that need to be examined and understood,” the former regulator asked.
Commenting on Bitcoin mining specifically, Brooks took the opportunity to clear up some common misconceptions about mining and its alleged wastefulness.
No comments