This week, the US Senate's advancement of the CLARITY Act caused a stir on social media. Many analysts say this is a backdoor for the crypto industry, weakening regulatory efforts, and could lead to DeFi spiraling out of control. But those who have actually read the bill know that these claims are quite misleading.



The essence of CLARITY is not about relaxing regulation, but about ending the chaotic state of "legislation by enforcement" that has persisted over the past few years. Think back to the old days: a project might still be compliant today, but the SEC could suddenly file a lawsuit tomorrow claiming securities law violations. Rules were only revealed after the fact. This post-hoc rule-changing approach makes it impossible for anyone to plan properly. The bill's straightforward goal is to clearly define regulatory boundaries, specify who oversees what and how, and communicate this to the market in advance.

Many worry that this bill is sidelining securities law. In reality, it is not. The required disclosures remain unchanged, and violations will still be penalized accordingly. The SEC’s enforcement authority is not diminished; it simply no longer allows vague enforcement and after-the-fact accountability schemes. Looking at major cases like FTX, their collapse wasn’t due to overly strict regulation, but because of long-term neglect and unclear regulatory authority. Incorporating these risks into a framework allows for proactive prevention. As for the so-called "regulatory loopholes," honestly, the previous gray areas were actually easier to exploit. CLARITY aims to narrow those gray areas, not expand them.

DeFi has been hit hardest by criticism, but the bill is actually quite detailed. Developers who write code and institutions that directly control customer funds are categorized separately. Truly decentralized protocols are protected, but those claiming to be DeFi yet acting as intermediaries won’t escape scrutiny. Developers won’t be criminalized just for releasing code, and the right to self-custody assets is explicitly protected. Regulation targets specific behaviors, not the technology tools themselves.

The least friendly aspect of this bill is not to ordinary investors or diligent developers, but to projects that thrive on regulatory ambiguity—those that issue tokens first, then add logic later, with unclear positioning and rules that can be dodged. In the past, it was possible to operate in gray areas, but now it’s black or white: either follow compliance or exit. CLARITY cannot directly pump up token prices or save poorly managed projects; it simply clarifies whether you are operating within the rules. For projects aiming for long-term survival, this is a positive development. For those living on information asymmetry, it’s a different story.
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