A recent regulatory showdown in the US Congress is worth paying attention to. The head of the Senate Judiciary Committee publicly opposed Section 604 of the "Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act," with the main issue being: this section aims to protect software developers from being held liable due to third-party misuse of their code, but the Judiciary Committee believes this would weaken federal oversight of unlicensed money transfer activities.



What exactly is going on? The Department of Justice cited the case of Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm to emphasize the necessity of current regulations in holding illegal fund transfer activities accountable. If this protective clause takes effect, it could limit the government's enforcement scope.

The situation is even more complicated— the committee debate scheduled for this Thursday was canceled, and the opposition is quite strong. If the clause is retained, it will require approval from a third committee, making the legislative process more sluggish.

The attitude of the DeFi community is also quite interesting: if the developer protection clause is ultimately not included, some advocates say they might withdraw support for the bill. This essentially signals that negotiations could reach a deadlock— the Department of Justice is concerned about regulatory loopholes, while the DeFi camp fears over-penalizing developers.
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BearMarketBrovip
· 12h ago
It's the same old trick again; how could the government really give developers a protective amulet?
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AlgoAlchemistvip
· 22h ago
Coming again? Congress is trying to push developers out of the United States.
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OnchainFortuneTellervip
· 22h ago
It's the same old story again. The Justice Department is still talking about Tornado Cash. It's really annoying. Do I have to write code and be responsible for bad guys all over the world? This logic is absurd.
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ChainSpyvip
· 22h ago
It's the same old story again, the Department of Justice has to push developers to the limit before they'll be satisfied. This time it's really tricky; the Tornado Cash case definitely gave the Department of Justice some leverage. Honestly, if Clause 604 were to be abolished, I can understand the DeFi community wanting to turn against it, but if things continue like this, no one will come out ahead. The Roman Storm case is probably a dead end; the federal authorities have to find someone to take the blame. There's no winner in this stalemate, except for the lawyers who are raking in the profits.
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CoffeeNFTradervip
· 22h ago
It's the same old story... The Department of Justice wants to hunt down developers, but we want the freedom to write code. Whoever concedes will die.
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MidsommarWalletvip
· 23h ago
It's the same old trick again. When will the developer scapegoat role ever change?
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AlwaysAnonvip
· 23h ago
Coming with this again? Developer scapegoat, huh... Roman Storm's incident should have been reflected on long ago, and they're still using him as a shield. It's a deadlock, nothing new. The government just wants an all-powerful key, DeFi just wants to survive, and in the end, developers are still caught in the middle.
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