runam0k
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Touchdown
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October 28, 2014, 09:01:13 PM |
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AM is in China, SEC is an American thing. The SEC has no jurisdiction beyond the States.
You must be new here  I cant believe how often that BS has been posted and debunked, yet keeps being sprouted. AM is selling unregistered securities to (unsophisticated) US investors, and therefore subject to SEC regulation, no matter where they are located. Same goes for EU regulations and investors, Japanese, and basically.. everywhere else. And so Id say yes, its highly likely AM was among the targeted companies offering securities on directly on bitcointalk: http://cointelegraph.com/news/112811/us-regulators-one-two-punch-sec-probes-crowdsales-fincen-takes-aim-at-exchangesCorrect, but highly unlikely China will assist the SEC in any action, making any action impossible. Far more likely, the SEC will concentrate its efforts elsewhere.
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Chalkbot
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October 28, 2014, 09:11:23 PM |
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AM is in China, SEC is an American thing. The SEC has no jurisdiction beyond the States.
You must be new here  I cant believe how often that BS has been posted and debunked, yet keeps being sprouted. AM is selling unregistered securities to (unsophisticated) US investors, and therefore subject to SEC regulation, no matter where they are located. Same goes for EU regulations and investors, Japanese, and basically.. everywhere else. And so Id say yes, its highly likely AM was among the targeted companies offering securities on directly on bitcointalk: http://cointelegraph.com/news/112811/us-regulators-one-two-punch-sec-probes-crowdsales-fincen-takes-aim-at-exchangesCorrect, but highly unlikely China will assist the SEC in any action, making any action impossible. Far more likely, the SEC will concentrate its efforts elsewhere. What about Havelock/Panama? I'm unfamiliar with the relationship between Panamanian government and US regulatory agencies.
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Puppet
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October 28, 2014, 09:13:47 PM |
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Correct, but highly unlikely China will assist the SEC in any action, making any action impossible. Far more likely, the SEC will concentrate its efforts elsewhere.
Agreed, but they dont have to assist the SEC if we assume they ID-ed friedcat. Is friedcat willing to be charged and prosecuted in the US, even if his government will never extradite him? Fun prospect for a young entrepreneur to never be able to travel to the US. And for that matter, I have no idea if what he is doing is at all legal under Chinese law. Somehow I would be surprised securities would be less regulated in China than in the west. Whether or not Chinese authorities care, who knows, but they do seem to care a lot about bitcoin exchanges..
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gogxmagog
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Ad maiora!
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October 28, 2014, 09:17:53 PM Last edit: October 29, 2014, 01:59:20 AM by gogxmagog |
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whatever the case may be...I think this subject deserves some sort of comment from AM. They must have some ideas how they will proceed. Better we know now than when it is too late (havelock shuttered)
Can't believe even colored coins and counterparts are under attack too though!?! I thought they were immune to this BS.
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Puppet
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October 28, 2014, 09:18:29 PM |
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What about Havelock/Panama? I'm unfamiliar with the relationship between Panamanian government and US regulatory agencies. Do you really believe the people running Havelock reside in Panama?
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Chalkbot
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October 28, 2014, 09:26:32 PM |
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What about Havelock/Panama? I'm unfamiliar with the relationship between Panamanian government and US regulatory agencies. Do you really believe the people running Havelock reside in Panama? Well, I guess I don't know much. What do you know about it?
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Puppet
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October 28, 2014, 09:31:14 PM |
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Well, I guess I don't know much. What do you know about it?
I dont have facts or inside info either, but its a very safe bet its registered in Panama not because the operators have Panamese nationality or residence, but because its dead easy to register a PO box company there and evade regulation/taxation/etc.
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havelock
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October 28, 2014, 10:14:27 PM |
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Well, I guess I don't know much. What do you know about it?
I dont have facts or inside info either, but its a very safe bet its registered in Panama not because the operators have Panamese nationality or residence, but because its dead easy to register a PO box company there and evade regulation/taxation/etc. We are located and regulated locally in Panama.
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Chalkbot
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October 28, 2014, 10:19:32 PM |
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Well, I guess I don't know much. What do you know about it?
I dont have facts or inside info either, but its a very safe bet its registered in Panama not because the operators have Panamese nationality or residence, but because its dead easy to register a PO box company there and evade regulation/taxation/etc. We are located and regulated locally in Panama. Has Havelock commented on whether they received a letter from the SEC, and/or how they would respond to that scenario?
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jjdub7
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October 28, 2014, 11:02:28 PM |
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What about Havelock/Panama? I'm unfamiliar with the relationship between Panamanian government and US regulatory agencies. Do you really believe the people running Havelock reside in Panama? Didn't Erik Voorhees relocate to Panama for cryptobusiness operations?
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pedrog
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October 28, 2014, 11:12:55 PM |
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What about Havelock/Panama? I'm unfamiliar with the relationship between Panamanian government and US regulatory agencies. Do you really believe the people running Havelock reside in Panama? Didn't Erik Voorhees relocate to Panama for cryptobusiness operations? He did.
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MichaelBliss
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October 29, 2014, 12:09:26 AM |
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Correct, but highly unlikely China will assist the SEC in any action, making any action impossible. Far more likely, the SEC will concentrate its efforts elsewhere.
Exactly. You can claim to have dominion over the world, but here in reality America isn't the world police so they can say what they want, but they have no jurisdiction so no way to enforce their "rules".
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gogxmagog
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Ad maiora!
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October 29, 2014, 02:19:12 AM |
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Ok, this part of the letter; A must-read, imho. I imagine we will hear a lot more about the topic, but for now:
“A key element of the letter requires that those receiving the letter stay quiet and treat it as confidential. They may seek legal counsel but they may not reveal the fact they received a letter to those who are not directly involved with responding to the letter nor the public so the exact number of letters going out nor the companies receiving them will not be revealed by those affected without legal consequences.”
And, the whole thing is voluntary for now... I really don't know what will come of this, even how the SEC could enforce anything if operators work and reside out of country? Wouldn't their only option to be to ban U.S. citizens from trading on such services? I don't know enough about these areas of international and business law. SEC's mandate is to protect american investors. How would they go about policing the foreign based companies caught doing something wrong? Interpol? Falling btc, no divs, now this! Yeeeesh
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supert
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October 29, 2014, 08:32:41 AM |
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Actually I suspect AM may be able to argue that since there is no 'ownership' of the company conferred by owning AM shares, that they did not offer securities. This is obviously muddied by the use of the words IPO, share, securities etc.
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Puppet
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October 29, 2014, 08:42:21 AM |
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I really don't know what will come of this, even how the SEC could enforce anything if operators work and reside out of country? Wouldn't their only option to be to ban U.S. citizens from trading on such services? I don't know enough about these areas of international and business law. They certainly wouldnt ban users (/investors) from using those services. Interestingly its not all illegal to buy unregistered securities, its the selling and promoting thats the issue. As for what they can do; typically the sec would demand the seller stop promoting its products to US investors and demand they implement reasonable safeguards to make sure they do not sell to US nationals. Failing to do so may lead to prosecution, it may prompt them to contact their (in this case) Chinese counterparts. I dont know how chinese authorities look up on this, nor am I at all familiar with chinese security regulations, but considering their crackdown on bitcoin exchanges, this might be a more scary prospect than the SEC.
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Puppet
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October 29, 2014, 08:44:04 AM |
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Actually I suspect AM may be able to argue that since there is no 'ownership' of the company conferred by owning AM shares, that they did not offer securities. This is obviously muddied by the use of the words IPO, share, securities etc.
Clearly you have not read the legal definition of a security, nor have you been around for very long or you would have known better. There is absolutely zero doubt AM shares are legally securities subject to SEC regulation in so far they are offered to US investors.
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sharky101
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October 29, 2014, 12:16:19 PM |
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hdbuck
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October 29, 2014, 12:48:25 PM Last edit: October 29, 2014, 04:43:51 PM by hdbuck |
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Hum so i guess thats good news. Sort of a build up between these 4 manufacturers. Need to scale up and cooperate in order to be sustainable in this industry and in front of the (private) megalodon bitfury.
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supert
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October 29, 2014, 08:48:10 PM |
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Actually I suspect AM may be able to argue that since there is no 'ownership' of the company conferred by owning AM shares, that they did not offer securities. This is obviously muddied by the use of the words IPO, share, securities etc.
Clearly you have not read the legal definition of a security, nor have you been around for very long or you would have known better. There is absolutely zero doubt AM shares are legally securities subject to SEC regulation in so far they are offered to US investors. Applying a little bit of thought, you are clearly right.
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FUR11
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FURring bitcoin up since 1762
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October 29, 2014, 11:18:50 PM |
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Over 500 shares just dumped on Havelock! Holy cow, who do you think did that? Insider information or just an early adopter cashing out some of his stash? Maybe someone is willing to buy some AMHash??? 
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