"There's gonna be a bit of a correction along the way here where a lot of the players in the space that don't actually solve a real problem are going to get washed out."
During a conference this week, Garlinghouse spoke of Bitcoin's future as potentially ending up like the now defunct music service Napster, TechCrunch reported yesterday.
He noted that Napster "Showed us what's possible, but in the end, it was Spotify and iTunes and Pandora that won the day because they engaged with regulators."
Ripple's CEO also spoke to CNBC about crypto and securities regulation in the U.S., in response to the fact that a former U.S. government regulator said last month that both Ripple and Ethereum could likely be considered unregistered securities.
"If you own XRP, you don't own rights to the profits or any dividends to the company. XRP has real utility."
"The SEC is getting involved as they should because there have been frauds committed the government should be protecting investors and companies but there's also examples of real utility."
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission recently launched "Operation Cryptosweep," in collaboration with Canadian authorities, investigating potentially fraudulent crypto companies and Initial Coin Offerings.
The SEC had also launched a probe into cryptocurrency business at the beginning of March.
Ripple CEO Compares Bitcoin to Napster, Says BTC's Influence on Market Could Lessen
Publicado en May 31, 2018
by Cointele | Publicado en Coinage
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