‘Let’s build a Europe where Web3 can flourish:’ Crypto companies sign an open letter to EU regulators

Share This Post

Industry representatives call the authorities not to go beyond the scope of the FATF Travel Rule recommendation.

Forty crypto companies cosigned an open letter to the European Parliament, European Commission and other principal E.U. institutions with a call to ensure common-sense regulation, standardized compliance procedures, and an innovation-friendly business environment. 

An open letter on behalf of the international Web3 community and “businesses across Europe,” shared with Cointelegraph by one of the signatories, went out to EU institutions on April 19. The industry players expressed their concerns over some recent EU-level regulatory initiatives:

“We wish to urgently convey our concern with proposed EU laws that threaten the privacy of individuals as well as digital innovation, growth and job creation in Europe.”

More specifically, the cosigners claimed that recent proposals by some EU legislators, such as data disclosure requirements for non-custodial crypto wallets, can make the adoption of Web3 solutions excessively burdensome for European citizens.

The crypto stakeholders encouraged regulators to “not exceed the FATF Travel Rule recommendations for Crypto Asset Services Providers (“CASPs”) record-keeping and verification” and “ensure that decentralized protocols and entities are exempt from legal entity organization and registration.”

Related: Unhosted is unwelcome: EU’s attack on noncustodial wallets is part of a larger trend

Other requests included the exemption for algorithmic or otherwise decentralized stablecoins from the asset-referenced token definition in the proposed EU Regulation on Markets in Crypto Assets, or MiCA.

Among the stakeholders that have signed a letter are Pascal Gauthier of Ledger, Diana Biggs of DeFi Technologies, Jean-Baptiste Grafiteau of Bitstamp Europe, Lane Kasselman of Blockchain.com and others.

On March 31, members of two European Parliament Committees voted in support of the Anti-Money Laundering (AML) regulatory package that seeks to revise the current Transfer of Funds Regulation (TFR) in a way that requires crypto service providers to “verify the accuracy of [the] information concerning the originator or beneficiary behind the unhosted wallet” for every transaction made between a service provider (typically, a crypto exchange) and a non-custodial wallet. Many prominent founders and executives in the crypto space condemned the move, calling the requirements excessive and unfeasible. 

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Aave Address Count On Optimism Rapidly Growing, Will Price Rise To New 13-Month High?

Aave, the decentralized lending platform, is among the largest DeFi protocols by total value locked (TVL) Over the years, despite the crypto price boom and bust cycle, the platform has operated

The rise of crypto neobanks: Nikolai Denisenko on Brighty’s mission

In a recent episode of the SlateCast, Nikolay Denisenko, Co-Founder and CTO of Brighty App, joined CryptoSlate‘s Senior Editor Liam “Akiba” Wright and CEO Nate Whitehill to

Bitcoin Closes in on Price Peak – $69K Resistance in Sight

On Friday, bitcoin reached its highest price since late July, coming within just $2 of breaking through the $69,000 mark Recent data shows the cryptocurrency market has been on a consistent upward

BlackRock eyes crypto derivatives market with BUIDL as collateral

BlackRock is reportedly in discussions with several centralized exchanges to allow its BUIDL fund to be used as collateral for derivatives trades As reported by Bloomberg on Oct 18, people familiar

Before Bitcoin: 4 Early Digital Currencies and Why They Collapsed

Before bitcoin took the spotlight, several digital currencies aimed to change the way we exchange value, but none could withstand the test of time Ecash, E-gold, Liberty Reserve, and Q coins each had

Crypto Craze: Investor Nets A 3,360% Gain, Turning $86,000 Into $3.75 Million

In another fabulous story from the crypto market, an investor has realized a staggering 3,360% return, transforming an initial investment of $86,000 into approximately $39 million This extraordinary