U.S. SEC Chairman: We are planning an "innovation exemption" for DeFi protocols and should not be punished for malicious use by others

đŸ‘€ hlosw@Charlie 📅 2026-02-04 01:33:09

U.S. SEC Chairman Paul Atkins revealed that he is studying the "innovation exemption" for DeFi, reflecting the Trump administration's changing attitude towards cryptocurrency regulation.
(Preliminary summary: Michigan has proposed 4 crypto bills: pension investment in BTC, green mining and tax relief, and opposition to CBDC)
(Background supplement: Viewpoint "Never underestimate the U.S. stable currency bill)

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Paul Atkins revealed on June 9, 2025 that the SEC is actively studying decentralized finance (DeFi) The platform provides an "innovation exemption", which aims to lower regulatory barriers and provide convenience for developers.

SEC proposes “innovation exemption” to simplify DeFi development

At the SEC’s fifth cryptocurrency roundtable, Chairman Atkins clearly pointed out that studying DeFi’s “innovation exemption” is to simplify the development path. He has instructed staff to study amending the rules to "provide the necessary convenience for issuers and intermediaries seeking to manage on-chain financial systems."

This potential exemption is called an "innovation exemption" by Atkins and is expected to allow covered entities

to "quickly" bring on-chain products and services to market.

This is very different from former Chairman Gary Gensler’s attitude of emphasizing enforcement, and shows that the SEC’s regulatory model is shifting from enforcement priority to rule formulation and cooperation. Atkins said of the innovation potential of blockchain, “We shouldn’t automatically be afraid of the future.”

Regulatory thinking shifts: focus on developer responsibility and innovation

SEC Chairman Paul Atkins and Commissioner Hester Peirce both believe that developers should not be blamed just because others use code (DeFi tools) developed by someone. This move may involve the right to free speech under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Commissioner Peirce stated:

"The SEC should not infringe on the First Amendment rights by regulating someone simply because they publish code and others use that code to conduct activities that the SEC has traditionally regulated."

If implemented, the "Innovation Exemption" is expected to help accelerate the development of on-chain financial products, provide legal clarity, and solidify the United States' leading position in crypto innovation. However, challenges remain, and the SEC needs to effectively distinguish between genuine and fake decentralized projects. Commissioner Peirce warned:

Centralized entities cannot escape regulation simply by labeling them “decentralized.”

Label
share
FB X YT IG
hlosw@Charlie

hlosw@Charlie

Blockchain and cryptoassets editor, focusing onpolicyDomain content analysis and insights

Comment (10)

Henry 30days ago
Why can Rollup increase speed and reduce costs?
Reagan 30days ago
Technology is good technology, but it has been exploited by too many scams.
Mavis 31days ago
Agreed, technology and supervision will compete for a long time.
Audrey 31days ago
How do forks happen?
Blythe 31days ago
The NFT track has entered a new stage, and its application is more critical.
Zoe 31days ago
Interoperability will be the focus of competition in the next stage.
Gary 31days ago
What does Turing complete mean?
Milo 31days ago
This is the direction that blockchain should develop.
Drew 44days ago
Newbie, what is a Merkel tree?
Alfie 55days ago
The current technological maturity still needs to be improved.

Add comment

Popular content