World Liberty Financial applies for a license from U.S. federal regulators, planning to legitimize its stablecoin USD1 through official channels. What do you think of this move? The core purpose is straightforward—obtaining legal status within the federal regulatory framework, which can significantly reduce policy uncertainties and market friction. Stablecoins have long been stuck in a gray area, with project teams either bypassing regulations or passively bearing the risks. World Liberty Financial's choice to proactively embrace federal regulation essentially means: we want to play by the rules. What does this mean for the entire stablecoin sector? Once approved, USD1 will be protected and supervised by federal authorities like traditional payment tools, greatly boosting user confidence. It also sends a signal—America's stance on stablecoin regulation is gradually becoming clearer, not simply banning but standardizing. Such cases will serve as reference templates for future entrants.
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BearMarketNoodler
· 01-12 20:15
Projects that proactively embrace regulation tend to last longer. Players operating in the gray areas need to wake up.
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EthSandwichHero
· 01-12 19:55
Proactively embracing regulation? I've seen this trick before, and in the end, it all depends on the SEC's mood.
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ThatsNotARugPull
· 01-09 21:56
Embracing regulation proactively? This guy really understands it. Instead of fighting the Federal Reserve, it's better to play along. Compliant stablecoins are the future.
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BlindBoxVictim
· 01-09 21:56
Compliance is compliance, but can we really trust those folks at the Federal Reserve...
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GasGuzzler
· 01-09 21:53
Proactively embracing regulation? This move is indeed clever, much better than playing hide and seek, but the approval process can make people bald.
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SerumSquirrel
· 01-09 21:50
The path to compliance is indeed not so easy to walk, but at least you don't have to be on edge every day.
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PaperHandSister
· 01-09 21:38
Oops, finally someone dares to challenge the regulators directly. I have to give credit for this move.
Proactively embracing the federal framework, in simple terms, is an attempt to crawl out of the gray area. Smart people... However, if it gets approved, it might not be a good thing. Once it falls under formal regulation, those wild strategies will die out.
I'm optimistic about this trend. Stablecoins will inevitably move toward standardization. Projects that get on board early will feel more secure.
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FloorPriceNightmare
· 01-09 21:34
Proactively embracing regulation? This guy really wants to stay alive for the long term, unlike some project teams that are still sleepwalking.
World Liberty Financial applies for a license from U.S. federal regulators, planning to legitimize its stablecoin USD1 through official channels. What do you think of this move? The core purpose is straightforward—obtaining legal status within the federal regulatory framework, which can significantly reduce policy uncertainties and market friction. Stablecoins have long been stuck in a gray area, with project teams either bypassing regulations or passively bearing the risks. World Liberty Financial's choice to proactively embrace federal regulation essentially means: we want to play by the rules. What does this mean for the entire stablecoin sector? Once approved, USD1 will be protected and supervised by federal authorities like traditional payment tools, greatly boosting user confidence. It also sends a signal—America's stance on stablecoin regulation is gradually becoming clearer, not simply banning but standardizing. Such cases will serve as reference templates for future entrants.