🔵 #Can BTC Break $110K?#
Bitcoin recently broke above $107,000 and is currently trading around $105,000, just shy of its all-time high at $109,580. Do you think Bitcoin can set a new record and push past $110,000? Share your analysis and predictions with us!
🔵 #AI Token Market Cap Rebounds#
According to CoinGecko, the total market cap of the AI agent sector has rebounded to $6.862 billion, with a 1.2% increase in the past 24 hours. Notably, VIRTUAL surged 18.5%, and AI16Z rose 7.1%. Which AI tokens are you bullish on? How are you planning your portfolio strategy? Let’s hear your thoughts!
Hester Peirce said the government shouldn't hinder people who want to try new things - CoinJournal
SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce has said that it’s been “extremely frustrating” watching what’s been happening within crypto when people want to try new things.
Speaking in an interview on Bloomberg, the newly appointed head of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) new crypto task force said:
“Watching what’s happened to crypto for the past several years has just been extremely frustrating for someone who believes that government is there to serve the American people, not to stymie them when they’re trying new things.”
The crypto task force aims to provide regulatory clarity for the crypto industry. The agency is also planning to work with other agencies, including the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to achieve its goal.
Not a free-for-all
Commissioner Peirce, who’s often described as “Crypto Mom,” said she referred to herself more as a “freedom maximalist” rather than someone who’s an advocate for the industry.
When asked as a freedom maximalist if she believes the crypto industry should be regulated, Peirce said she was committed to using the existing statutory framework, adding that “it doesn’t mean a free-for-all all. It doesn’t mean you get to do whatever you want. We have rules in place and those rules will be enforced.”
At the same time, Peirce adds that US regulation is designed to have basic parameters while allowing people to have “maximum freedom to innovate and try new things…with the understanding that with that comes responsibility and that if something goes wrong, you don’t necessarily have someone to run to.”