New York Extends Comment Period for BitLicense Proposal
New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) superintendent Benjamin M Lawsky has extended the comment period for the BitLicense proposal by an additional 45 days. The agency cited the large volume of input from various sources, including prominent members of the bitcoin community, as the primary reason to double the comment period. The NYDFS announced the move on its official website, moving the final deadline to 21st October. The notice cited requests from the bitcoin community, which included grassroots supporters and the Bitcoin Foundation, as a driver of the deadline change. The....
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The 30-day period during which the public can submit comment on the latest draft of New York's BitLicense proposal has begun. The formal comment period was initiated by the publication of the notice in the New York Register, a weekly periodical designed to keep state citizens up-to-date on rulemaking. Following roughly three weeks since the introduction of the framework, the publication seems likely to spur a new round of debate over the regulation and its more controversial measures. Speaking to CoinDesk, a number of the more prominent voices in the bitcoin community voiced concerns that....
The Bitcoin Foundation has thrown its weight behind efforts to extend the 45 day-long comment period for the BitLicense proposal drafted and recently released by the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS). In an open letter to the NYDFS, Global Policy Counsel for the Bitcoin Foundation Jim Harper said that there needs to be greater cooperation with the bitcoin community and more transparency for the process as a whole. The organization's efforts to advocate for a more growth-oriented BitLicense proposal builds on a previous grassroots-level initiative in which roughly 400....
As described in a blog post released today, the Bitcoin Foundation has submitted a second public comment to the NYDFS's proposed BitLicense public comment period. The NYDFS has refused to reveal the "needs and benefits" justifications, which are legally required, for the BitLicense's severity. In this comment, Bitcoin Foundation General Policy Counsel Jim Harper emphasized that: The sacrifice of some decentralization in furtherance of other benefits to the Bitcoin ecosystem must meet a high burden of proof. Nobody should want a regulation that sacrifices Bitcoin's benefits if doing so....
The BitLicense saga continues: Today, Ben Lawsky took to Twitter to announce that the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) will be extending the official comment period for the proposed BitLicense regulatory framework. The original plan was to allow a 45-day comment period; around the world, this timeframe was criticized as being too short given the magnitude of the proposed regulations. Presumably, as a result of the community's interest, the NYDFS has chosen to extend the official comment period from 45-day period to a 90-day period. The news has been well-received by the....
Since the release of the BitLicense regulations from the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS), one of the most common complaints has been the lack of time the public has to comment on them (in order to propose revisions, and the like). Chamber of Digital Commerce President Perianne Boring even called the 45-day period "severely inadequate" - a sentiment echoed a good number of times now by others. Thankfully for the community, the NYDFS has heard the complaint loud and clear. As of Thursday, the Department's Superintendent Benjamin Lawsky announced that the commenting period....