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The CEO and co-founder of cryptocurrency exchange Kraken defended the company’s refusal to comply with a regulatory “questionnaire” sent by New York lawmakers.


Kraken Rails Against Attorney General’s ‘Disrespect’

In comments, which contrasted with the other 12 exchanges targeted by New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman’s “Virtual Markets Integrity Initiative,” Jesse Powell said Kraken would not hand over any information about its business.

Kraken ceo: we won’t give info to ‘audacious’ new york regulators

Jesse Powell, chief executive officer of Kraken

When it launched the Initiative April 17, Schneiderman’s office explained it was “requesting disclosures on their operations, use of bots, conflicts of interest, outages, and other key issues” with the aim of “protecting consumers.”

Among the demands was a two-week deadline for handing over the information, something which Powell specifically took issue with.

“When I saw this 34-point demand, with a deadline 2 weeks out, I immediately thought ‘The audacity of these guys — the entitlement, the disrespect for our business, our time!’” he responded.

BitLicense’s Three Years Of Strife

The move comes as New York’s infamous BitLicense scheme faces fresh criticism from businesses in the state.

Since its launch in 2015, multiple cryptocurrency businesses including Kraken have left in order to avoid what the exchange at the time called “a creature so foul, so cruel that not even Kraken possesses the courage or strength to face its nasty, big, pointy teeth.”

The scheme has faced near-constant dissent from affected entities from the planning stages onwards, with lengthy delays in issuing BitLicenses only adding to the disaster.

Kraken ceo: we won’t give info to ‘audacious’ new york regulators

Now, as Powell looks back on the “wise decision” to “get the hell out,” the local business community has complained so bitterly that lawmakers have had to promise either a reworking or abandonment of the legislation altogether.

For Kraken, however, it appears such efforts are a case of ‘too little too late.’

“Kraken left New York because New York is hostile to crypto, and this ‘questionnaire’ we received today proves that New York is not only hostile to crypto, it is hostile to business,” Powell added.

What do you think about Kraken’s handling of the Virtual Markets Integrity Initiative? Let us know in the comments section below!


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attorney generalbitlicenseEric T. SchneidermanJesse PowellKrakennew york Show comments

Published at Thu, 19 Apr 2018 10:00:31 +0000

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