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Author Topic: ICO vs crowdfunding  (Read 2469 times)
CherrySoda (OP)
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September 06, 2017, 01:22:12 AM
 #1

Could someone explain to me how ICO's are different from crowdfunding? Why would it be regulated differently?
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September 06, 2017, 01:58:47 AM
 #2

I have not posted here before, so maybe no one will reply, but I'm still trying to wrap my mind around why China's decision to ban ICO's had such a huge impact on the value of cryptocurrency in general. Seems unrelated in a sense...I am a huge believer in what bitcoin can offer...are ICO's undermining that effort?
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September 06, 2017, 12:27:05 PM
 #3

I have not posted here before, so maybe no one will reply, but I'm still trying to wrap my mind around why China's decision to ban ICO's had such a huge impact on the value of cryptocurrency in general. Seems unrelated in a sense...I am a huge believer in what bitcoin can offer...are ICO's undermining that effort?

It seems unrelated because it most likely is. To be honest, I don't think China's ICO statement was the cause of the current dip. It's only natural that a correction would occur after a new ATH, especially with a psychological barrier such as USD 5000,-. People always try to find an explanation after the fact and sometimes occurrences such as China's ICO statement simply seem to fit.

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CherrySoda (OP)
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September 06, 2017, 12:48:45 PM
 #4

Thanks for the reply! Your explanation makes more sense than the articles I read on the subject.
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September 06, 2017, 07:19:47 PM
Last edit: September 06, 2017, 09:56:41 PM by AgentofCoin
 #5

Could someone explain to me how ICO's are different from crowdfunding? Why would it be regulated differently?

Simply, ICOs allow "investing" and "crowdfunding" without having
to report personal identification or going through legal compliance
systems like KYC/AML, and you are provided a token as a proof of
purchase, thus it is an "illegal security" asset.

When a legally regulated company uses ICOs in order to get capital,
it will only occur for three reasons: (1) that company is stupid and
their CEOs and lawyers have advised them improperly, or (2) that
company is a scam that will eventually run away with the money,
or (3) that company is a front to help launder either ill gotten
cryptocurrencies or dirty money, which will likely also scam
and disappear one day.

In most countries, an ICO token would be interpreted to be a
"security". Any altcoin, can transform into an ICO, when it is
created or directly associated with a legal organization and its
funding (and the corps business is not the token or the chain).
Companies are not allowed to create "securities" without the
oversight and approval by their government's financial
regulators. This is very well known and people who
are shocked by this action (in China now, and the future
actions that are to come in other places) shows blatant
ignorance of the law and how it functions. ICOs are not
the same as Bitcoin and can not function as such.

In theory, there is no valid purpose for ICOs except for legally
regulated companies to violate the law, which is clearly asinine.
A regulated ICO is an oxymoron and in practice is impossible to
guarantee full compliance. So, it is simpler to make ICOs illegal
for businesses, than to attempt to regulate them, since they by
design, facilitate no other function than noncompliance.

IMO, ICOs are only beneficial for the funding and creation of
illegal markets or illegal software. Of course, when this occurs,
majority of those project will be scams as well, but at least
those ICOs are not legal oxymorons like today's version.

Edit: typos

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September 06, 2017, 08:54:43 PM
 #6

I have not posted here before, so maybe no one will reply, but I'm still trying to wrap my mind around why China's decision to ban ICO's had such a huge impact on the value of cryptocurrency in general. Seems unrelated in a sense...I am a huge believer in what bitcoin can offer...are ICO's undermining that effort?

You're correct in that it is unrelated (or at least only indirectly related). Crowdfunding and offering securities has nothing inherently to do with cryptocurrency.

Here's the thing: the ICO "bubble" has been front-and-center this year. People need to buy ETH (and in some cases BTC) in order to participate in ICOs. Furthermore, much of the funds raised are then held in cryptocurrencies rather than fiat currencies, which helps to drive the price of BTC and ETH upwards.

So, from a fundamental perspective, if you believe that ICO investment was driving BTC and ETH investment, then this throws a wrench into that process.
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September 07, 2017, 01:36:24 AM
 #7

Thank you all! This is great insight. Much better than the info I get from the news.
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September 07, 2017, 01:00:05 PM
 #8

In view of the initial coin bargains super fruitful (ICO) from organizations including Iconomy, DTV Singular, First Blood and Decent, it is very certain that the group bolsters crowdsale cryptocurrency token of new companies based private Blockchain.

Notwithstanding, the whole system presale on cryptocurrency has pulled in feedback from specialists, which raises a great deal of persuading contentions against the authenticity of the ICO.

Every startup Blockchain can participate in ICO, even with some code scraps or shallow depiction of their administrations. The straightforward thought behind crowdfunding no product or framework has turned into a pattern in the business cryptographic money, with privately owned businesses/private segment to raise a huge number of dollars to fund their operations.
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September 07, 2017, 04:17:29 PM
 #9

Could someone explain to me how ICO's are different from crowdfunding? Why would it be regulated differently?

I quite agree that they are different but the issue if China not regulating crowd funding does not mean they  won't because looking at the report lay emphasis more on companies coming first time for funds and that's what ICOs is all about compared to crowd funding which is about existing business and more common for gambling sites. Maybe when that alone is starting to being exploited, then regulation is possible.
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September 08, 2017, 07:40:58 PM
 #10

Could someone explain to me how ICO's are different from crowdfunding? Why would it be regulated differently?

It would seem ICOs are specifically referring to crypto currencies or tokens offered in exchange for crowdfunding, while crowdfunding in itself is just raising money with a crowd. there has ben crowdfunding for a while now; observe gofundme and indygogo. but they werent offering a token or coin, essentially a security, with an expectation of profit. why else would anyone invest in these? i love some of these ideas, but i would never just "donate' money. if its a company, i would invest by buying shares. these icos are essentially issuing stocks in the majority of cases; of course this was going to be regulated eventually. the laws for legitimate securities are draconian.

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September 09, 2017, 05:58:28 AM
 #11

Could someone explain to me how ICO's are different from crowdfunding? Why would it be regulated differently?

Initial Coin Offering (ICO) is almost similar to crowdfunding...I think the big difference is that when we are talking about ICO we mostly linked it to projects in the cryptocurrency sphere while crowdfunding can be any project that is looking for source of capital usually coming from small investors. There had been many crowdfunding platforms that became famous like IndieGoGo...I think those are actually predecessor of the ICO platform (though some may not agree with me on this comparison).
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September 09, 2017, 08:22:16 AM
 #12

Could someone explain to me how ICO's are different from crowdfunding? Why would it be regulated differently?

Initial Coin Offering (ICO) is almost similar to crowdfunding...I think the big difference is that when we are talking about ICO we mostly linked it to projects in the cryptocurrency sphere while crowdfunding can be any project that is looking for source of capital usually coming from small investors. There had been many crowdfunding platforms that became famous like IndieGoGo...I think those are actually predecessor of the ICO platform (though some may not agree with me on this comparison).

The main difference between crowdfunding platforms such as IndieGoGo / Kickstarter and ICOs is that ICOs are offering part of the profits (in one way or another), while IndieGoGo / Kickstarter campaigns are more of a way to provide earlier, cheaper access to promising new products. ICOs try to raise money by issuing tokens that are in most cases akin to securities while IndieGoGo / Kickstarter campaigns try to raise money be doing pre-sales of their product.

In short, ICOs are a crowdfunded mixture of venture capital and IPOs, which is also why the SEC and China got involved.

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September 09, 2017, 10:28:40 AM
 #13

ICO is different from crowdfunding or IPO.

Crowdfunding or IPOs are regulated by most countries which impose restrictions on who is allowed to fund or how much they are allowed to contribute.
ICO is unregulated. It was born to bypass the regulations. People can invest as much as they want. Everyone can raise money by issuing cryptocurrency. There is no need to have developed products. The only you need is ideas. And you can raise more money than Crowdfunding. Investors  often don’t have any right to the company. So there is no protection. It is often considered as a crowdsales (their products are coins. So for tax purpose, they will be taxed, proceeds from IPO are not taxed).

In my opinion, most of ICOs are scams. Their projects will die eventually (although there are many promising projects out there)
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September 09, 2017, 10:34:45 AM
 #14

I don't like IC0s....its a waste of peoples time and money
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September 09, 2017, 03:21:32 PM
 #15

I don't like IC0s....its a waste of peoples time and money
Your thinking is absolutely wrong i think.Because is ICO is very important for newbie in this forum because a newbie member is does not all about this forum.ICO is my favourite.
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September 09, 2017, 07:05:30 PM
 #16



In theory, there is no valid purpose for ICOs except for legally
regulated companies to violate the law, which is clearly asinine.
A regulated ICO is an oxymoron and in practice is impossible to
guarantee full compliance. So, it is simpler to make ICOs illegal
for businesses, than to attempt to regulate them, since they by
design, facilitate no other function than noncompliance.

IMO, ICOs are only beneficial for the funding and creation of
illegal markets or illegal software. Of course, when this occurs,
majority of those project will be scams as well, but at least
those ICOs are not legal oxymorons like today's version.



Wow. What a horrid outlook.

ICOs allow autonomy of money. They allow decentralized participation.

The average person can get in on an ICO, the same way they can go to a casino. Where as securities require archaic framework, muddled with endless corruption, short sellers, etc. You may not even be able to buy into them, depending on who you are and who they are, and it'll cost you money.

An ICO also allows funding without a change in ownership. Unlike a traditional security where public stock offerings may kill the company under new ownership, thereby screwing the small investor, an ICO doesn't relinquish control to penny pushers. Another way to see them is they allows the mission statement to continue without intervention.

IMO ICOs are amazing, many of their attributes will be found in the future of investing.

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September 09, 2017, 09:20:37 PM
Last edit: September 09, 2017, 09:50:19 PM by AgentofCoin
 #17

...
In theory, there is no valid purpose for ICOs except for legally
regulated companies to violate the law, which is clearly asinine.
A regulated ICO is an oxymoron and in practice is impossible to
guarantee full compliance. So, it is simpler to make ICOs illegal
for businesses, than to attempt to regulate them, since they by
design, facilitate no other function than noncompliance.

IMO, ICOs are only beneficial for the funding and creation of
illegal markets or illegal software. Of course, when this occurs,
majority of those project will be scams as well, but at least
those ICOs are not legal oxymorons like today's version.
Wow. What a horrid outlook.
ICOs allow autonomy of money. They allow decentralized participation.

The average person can get in on an ICO, the same way they can go to a casino. Where as securities require archaic framework, muddled with endless corruption, short sellers, etc. You may not even be able to buy into them, depending on who you are and who they are, and it'll cost you money.

I Authenticate
It is not horrid, it is how the law functions.
You have two choices here: either comply or circumvent.

ICOs can not be decentralized and are actually rings of centralization
upon each other. Depending on your parent system, all ICO dependents
could be voided or outright destroyed.

Casinos are majority of the time regulated and when you deposit or
withdraw, you are forced to comply with their KYC/AML. So, ICOs are
not like Casinos in anyway, unless you are taking about unregulated
or illegal casinos.

Your personal beliefs on how "securities" function and the barriers
to entry are irrelevant. Security devices were created to be regulated
for human protection from human exploitation. Whether the current
system is an efficient one, is irrelevant. The original purpose was
protection from those who are destructive to the larger system.
ICOs, as they currently exist, are destructive to different systems
and do not provide any benefit to the world, accept maybe as to
revealing new loopholes that governments will eventually patch,
since it is possible to patch and enforce against such a weak device.
In most ways, ICOs are worse than Shitcoins.



An ICO also allows funding without a change in ownership. Unlike a traditional security where public stock offerings may kill the company under new ownership, thereby screwing the small investor, an ICO doesn't relinquish control to penny pushers. Another way to see them is they allows the mission statement to continue without intervention.

IMO ICOs are amazing, many of their attributes will be found in the future of investing.

This is irrelevant since ownership does not exist in ICOs, nor in
properly functioning blockchain systems. If you claim you have
ownership, it is only because your human government has
granted you those rights, like with legitimate securities. ICOs are
illegal and unregistered financial devices, designed to exploit the
system so that human exploitation could be performed with very
high gains.

When you combine "legally complying entities" WITH an "illegal
circumvention devices", and argue that it has valid aspects, to
my understanding, that is comparable to saying "murder is beneficial".
It could be argued that murder is a more efficient and natural way
for humans to acquiring assets or property, when compared to
doing such through burdensome and numerous hurdles of the
governmental regulation systems. The laws exist to prevent
actions that you are either aware of or not, and whether you will
perform or not. What is burdensome to you as a normal user,
is preventive to another who is an normal attacker. ICOs allow
normal attackers to perform exploitation upon the normal users.
Regulation of ICOs can never stop exploitation in the same manner
that regulated securities currently do, so it will be outlawed for
legal entities to use.

The reality is that ICOs will likely not survive into the future
because they circumvent while being created by legal entities that
are forced to comply. This contradiction is laughable and means
either two things: either stupidity or outright scam. These tokens
and their controllers are ripe for enforcement and their time will
come since they are all ignorant or willful. The governments
and laws profit most from human ignorance. If humans always
complied and were knowledgeable, governments would serve no
purpose. The reality is that your current programming prevents
you from taking appropriate actions and thus needs human
governance to protect you from others, and others from you.

Danger Close ICO No Play
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September 09, 2017, 11:57:00 PM
 #18

So it seems that ICO's are controversial and will inevitably be scrutinized by governments and the media. Does anyone have thoughts on how this will impact crypocurrency in general? It seems to me that the ultimate goal for cyrpocurrency is to get more mainstream, and more accessible- which was happening until the news out of China. If the international conversation turns to ICOs and regulations, do you think this will stall progress overall?
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September 10, 2017, 12:14:54 AM
 #19

I think it'll take a major player to come in and set the trend. Right now it seems as if a good amount of countries are too unfamiliar, so they default to just not allowing it. But then you have places like Switzerland who have issued blockchain passports. Maybe if the US or China chooses to somehow implement and regulate, ICO's will be allowed again. With cryptocurrencies, it can be hard to regulate if people don't cash out. Great insight on this thread.
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September 10, 2017, 12:17:49 AM
 #20

ICO's are great, but the government will always want a piece of the pie. Except this pie has a barrier of entry. I'm interested to see how the next few years will look like with crypto, blockchain tech, and just the sheer amount of governments competing to be the first to implement.
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