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I work in fintech. I'm not sure what bank regulations you think are overzealous. To give an example, banks can legally keep you from accessing your data. Whether by blocking your screen scraping or providing an API with poor coverage.

You understand I imagine that the regulations don't use the word "unsophisticated" and as such it's a red herring. We have these (few) regulations because banks and their consumers are not entering into a business arrangement on similar footing. I'm not "too big to fail". I don't get a bailout.

Banks love to collude with one another or engage in predatory behavior, and when we repealed the Glass-Steagall act in 1999 it took less than a decade for the subprime mortgage crisis to rear its ugly head. Allowing banks to also act as securities firms will continue to show us these "once in a lifetime" economic recessions every decade or so. And would you look at that? It's been over a decade since the subprime mortgage crisis, yet here we are back in the same glut.

Crypto doesn't solve any of that. It solved double spending. Most of the "exchanges" that people are using are mixing banking and securities, and when crypto blows out there is nothing left to catch most of the retail investors that shoulder that cost. There already are so many examples that listing them is prohibitive, but I'll remind everyone that Mt Gox handled 70% of all Bitcoin transactions at the time and lost 6% of the entire Bitcoin circulation at the time to hacks. No FDIC insurance, do not pass go, do not collect $200. Laissez faire becomes laissez tomber.

I wish people were honest about why they like crypto -- it's a speculative asset in a time when most people can't afford appreciating assets, and it doesn't require an ID if you avoid exchanges so you can buy contraband. The drawbacks are someone can code a button that is difficult to inspect and if you press it your entire wallet is drained with no recourse. Haven't even touched on the energy or silicon expenditures for a system with laughably tiny adoption



You're missing the point entirely. It's not as if the regulatory landscape is only decided by regulators. The fact that we have balance in regulations is because other people push back on regulators (legislators, lobbyists, etc). This is a good balancing act, that should result in reasonably optimal regulations.

But it doesn't mean the moral hazard doesn't exist.


Could you share a citation for your claim of "laughably tiny adoption"? What data are you looking at to reach this perspective?


A definition of "adoption" would also help here. Are we counting the zero-sum game speculators as "adopters", or are we counting something like flows enabling the legally compliant exchange of goods and services in the real world?




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