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Korea Blockchain Week: diverging crypto paths for the US and Asia

Taking place at the Shilla Hotel in central Seoul, the sixth annual Korea Blockchain Week’s main two-day conference, Impact, hosted 263 different blockchain companies, attracting over 6,000 participants eager to learn about the industry’s ups and downs in a year dominated by bear market sentiment.

Much of the 85 panel discussions focused on differences in the regulatory environments of the U.S. — traditionally the largest single crypto market and source of much of the industry’s funding — and Asia, where various jurisdictions including South Korea and Japan are creating a more crypto-friendly environment for developers and investors alike.

Caroline Pham, a commissioner at U.S. regulator the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), said during her fireside chat at KBW that she sees a unified approach between policymakers, regulators and the private sector in Asia that encourages innovation.

“I think it’s funny that in the United States we have been so used to some of the tremendous successes that we’ve had in the tech sector that we take it for granted,” Pham said. “It’s like everything (in Asia) is 10 years ahead of where we are in the U.S.”

That is less related to technical skill or knowledge, she said, but “because there’s an openness to technology and to changing things.”

US scrutiny

Another U.S. regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), has stepped up scrutiny of the crypto industry this year based on the claim that most cryptocurrencies other than Bitcoin are securities.

This logic has guided the agency’s lawsuits against a number of digital asset firms including software developer Ripple Labs, cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase Global and Paxos Trust, the issuer of the Binance USD (BUSD) stablecoin.

Most of the SEC’s lawsuits are yet to be settled as the cryptos-as-securities claim is disputed by the companies involved. In July, the U.S. court ruled that programmatic sales of Ripple’s XRP token do not qualify as securities offerings. The SEC filed an appeal against the ruling the following month, which Ripple then asked the court to deny.

Such delays in establishing crypto rules may hinder industry growth, former White House cybersecurity director Carole House said during a talk about the regulatory landscapes of the U.S. and Asia. House warned that “overly harsh” regulation of the crypto industry could stifle blockchain innovation in the U.S.

In contrast, Konstantin Richter, the CEO and founder of California-based blockchain infrastructure company Blockdaemon, said regulatory scrutiny in the U.S. is a long-term positive for the industry, despite current difficulties.