tertius.eth | LexDAO. Disclaimer: This is not {insert legal jargon here} advice

Joined January 2017
9 Photos and videos
TΞrtius retweeted
31 Oct 2024
Immutable has received a Wells notice from the SEC, the latest in their de facto policy of regulation by enforcement. We received this within hours of our first ever conversation, on a timeline clearly accelerated to land before an election. Sadly, stories like this are becoming less surprising each time. We’ve seen an increasing number of companies like @Coinbase, @Consensys, @Uniswap, @OpenSea, @cryptocom face SEC escalations, many in the last two months. With this latest move against Immutable, the SEC’s overreach continues and expands into gaming. Immutable is well capitalized with a large war-chest to build for the future of gaming, and if needed, we will stand up and fight to defend digital ownership for gamers. But the SEC’s approach hinders every startup trying to innovate in an already difficult industry. Read our full statement here: immutable.com/blog/defending… Under the current administration, the SEC has filed (and lost) a string of lawsuits, seeking to regulate crypto via enforcement rather than policy. Last year, Ripple won a “landmark victory” where Judge Torres found that XRP was not a security. After publicly stating Ethereum was a commodity, the SEC secretly opened an investigation into ETH. They shut this investigation down after Consensys sued them to defend Ethereum’s ecosystem in June of this year. Last year, Grayscale sued the SEC to open the floodgates for institutional adoption of crypto. They won, with the court finding the SEC’s denial of Grayscale’s proposal "arbitrary and capricious.” In recent weeks we’ve seen the SEC’s overreach continue to expand with the livelihoods and freedoms of musicians, artists and other content creators now under threat in light of the SEC’s move against NFT platform OpenSea. The industry desperately wants clear guidelines for compliance, and instead companies are forced to spend millions of dollars in legal fees to even get off the ground. At the end of the day, this hinders the many companies in crypto trying to build real products. Immutable has been building since 2018 to bring digital ownership to the $110B of in-game items sold each year - we are not here to play short-term games. It’s business as usual for our team, products and services. We are confident in our position, in the value digital ownership can bring to 3.1 billion gamers across the world, and in the power of blockchain to create a better internet. If required, we will fight for these rights, and those of our industry, vigorously. In the words of dissenting commissioner Hester Peirce: “Leaving crypto to be addressed in an endless series of misguided and overreaching cases has been and continues to be a consequential mistake”. Until that changes, we will fight for game developers, players, and creators for digital ownership. And we will keep building.

339
519
3,157
598,210
22 Oct 2024
Not for nothing
1
95
22 Oct 2024
Although
1
53
30 Apr 2024
Definitely a money transmitter
1
101
TΞrtius retweeted
6 Mar 2024
UPDATE: FinCEN now claims that it is only prohibited from enforcing the CTA *against the specific parties to the case* 🤡 🤡🤡 @SecYellen you didn't go to law school so i'll give you a pass and fill you in: if a law is unconstitutional, you can't enforce it against ANYONE
3 Mar 2024
🚨CORPORATE TRANSPARENCY ACT FOUND UNCONSTITUTIONAL BY FEDERAL DISTRICT COURT🚨 Yesterday, the Northern District of Alabama held in 𝘕𝘢𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯𝘢𝘭 𝘚𝘮𝘢𝘭𝘭 𝘉𝘶𝘴𝘪𝘯𝘦𝘴𝘴 𝘜𝘯𝘪𝘵𝘦𝘥 𝘷. 𝘠𝘦𝘭𝘭𝘦𝘯 that the CTA is unconstitutional because Congress lacked the power to pass it (at least in its current form). The CTA, which went into effect on Jan. 1, requires a "reporting company," upon formation, to disclose sensitive personal information of its beneficial owners (such as home address) and keep this information up-to-date. While the full definition is complex, "reporting company" includes your average small business LLC. The statute is both invasive of privacy and massively increases the compliance costs for business owners - especially for digital nomads, who may move often and may not have a physical presence in the U.S. The stakes are high because willful failure to comply can result in substantial penalties and prison time. In yesterday's ruling, the Court held that the CTA is problematic because it does not flow from Congress's enumerated powers (such as foreign affairs, commerce, and taxation powers). In other words, Congress can't just pass a law because reasons. The Court's rejection of the Commerce Clause as a source of authority is a big deal because Congress sneaks a lot of laws in under that clause. But the Court noted that creation of a business entity is not, in itself, economic activity. Right before dropping the mic, the court ordered that "the Defendants, along with any other agency or employee acting on behalf of the United States, are PERMANENTLY ENJOINED from enforcing the Corporate Transparency Act against the Plaintiffs." What does this mean? -Treasury will definitely appeal, so this isn't the final word--but imo, the opinion is very well-reasoned. -We may see similar cases bubble up in other federal districts, though I'm not aware of any currently pending. -As a practical matter, FinCEN *might* not pursue CTA enforcement while appeals are pending, but the injunction technically only prevents enforcement against the specific parties to the lawsuit, so I wouldn't bank on that (not legal advice ofc). -Even if Treasury wins an appeal, there's still a possibility of a court striking the CTA down on other grounds, such as the CTA violating a constitutional amendment. -TLDR, we're moving in the right direction, but as they'd say down here in the South, it ain't over. For now, worth celebrating the little win - and I've never been more proud to be admitted to the Northern District of Alabama. Here's the full opinion: courtlistener.com/docket/665…
3
5
29
2,480
TΞrtius retweeted
2 Mar 2024
very excite to unveil @gitcoin 2.0 whitepaper ht @MegLister for being my ride or die co-author read it 👉 gitcoin.co/whitepaper
6
32
182
18,696
TΞrtius retweeted
3 Mar 2024
🚨CORPORATE TRANSPARENCY ACT FOUND UNCONSTITUTIONAL BY FEDERAL DISTRICT COURT🚨 Yesterday, the Northern District of Alabama held in 𝘕𝘢𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯𝘢𝘭 𝘚𝘮𝘢𝘭𝘭 𝘉𝘶𝘴𝘪𝘯𝘦𝘴𝘴 𝘜𝘯𝘪𝘵𝘦𝘥 𝘷. 𝘠𝘦𝘭𝘭𝘦𝘯 that the CTA is unconstitutional because Congress lacked the power to pass it (at least in its current form). The CTA, which went into effect on Jan. 1, requires a "reporting company," upon formation, to disclose sensitive personal information of its beneficial owners (such as home address) and keep this information up-to-date. While the full definition is complex, "reporting company" includes your average small business LLC. The statute is both invasive of privacy and massively increases the compliance costs for business owners - especially for digital nomads, who may move often and may not have a physical presence in the U.S. The stakes are high because willful failure to comply can result in substantial penalties and prison time. In yesterday's ruling, the Court held that the CTA is problematic because it does not flow from Congress's enumerated powers (such as foreign affairs, commerce, and taxation powers). In other words, Congress can't just pass a law because reasons. The Court's rejection of the Commerce Clause as a source of authority is a big deal because Congress sneaks a lot of laws in under that clause. But the Court noted that creation of a business entity is not, in itself, economic activity. Right before dropping the mic, the court ordered that "the Defendants, along with any other agency or employee acting on behalf of the United States, are PERMANENTLY ENJOINED from enforcing the Corporate Transparency Act against the Plaintiffs." What does this mean? -Treasury will definitely appeal, so this isn't the final word--but imo, the opinion is very well-reasoned. -We may see similar cases bubble up in other federal districts, though I'm not aware of any currently pending. -As a practical matter, FinCEN *might* not pursue CTA enforcement while appeals are pending, but the injunction technically only prevents enforcement against the specific parties to the lawsuit, so I wouldn't bank on that (not legal advice ofc). -Even if Treasury wins an appeal, there's still a possibility of a court striking the CTA down on other grounds, such as the CTA violating a constitutional amendment. -TLDR, we're moving in the right direction, but as they'd say down here in the South, it ain't over. For now, worth celebrating the little win - and I've never been more proud to be admitted to the Northern District of Alabama. Here's the full opinion: courtlistener.com/docket/665…

3
32
88
25,967
TΞrtius retweeted
28 Feb 2024
Our members are making videos now. Don't worry, I'll advise on how to make it viral, wink, wink. Help virality anon. Do something.
28 Feb 2024
at @lex_DAO we believe law is a public good. if you agree, consider checking out this video. nsfw warning headed to the airport - see you soon denver xoxo
1
2
17
1,151
TΞrtius retweeted
19 Feb 2024
10 Useful Maxims about DAO-Era System Design 📜 AKA "how to compress 1000s of years of organizational design learnings into 10 easy memes" 🫠 AKA Rules @owocki lives by... 🧵
10
49
143
19,888
8 Feb 2024
In light of recent events, I am increasing my standard cryptolaw billing rate to $2,500/hr. Significant discounts may be available to clients that aren't bankruptcy estates and clients that aren't miserable/evil
1
5
102
6 Feb 2024
What’s the over/under on time it takes Elizabeth Warren to call #Farcaster social media for extremists?
96
TΞrtius retweeted
Incredibly excited to have just received my copies of the book that I published with @GiappichelliEdi about the #law of #NFTs
4
4
20
1,571
10 Oct 2023
Sick of regulatory uncertainty? We need the ERC-1933.86 standard: 'Futility Tokens'. Not redeemable, no governance authority, no equity interest. Perfect for any true DAO #FuTokens #Regulatethis @larryflorio
1
4
182
TΞrtius retweeted
Before he passed, Nikolai Mushegian, aka @delete_shitcoin sent me a link to a set of principles he had written up for his latest project. The link isn't available from the main site, so I want to share it here so that it is not lost to time. 🧵
19
221
899
230,014
8 Feb 2023
Yet to here an argument against code-is-law that couldn’t be made against law-is-law
1
116
TΞrtius retweeted
3 Feb 2023
🚨 Here my new article 👇 "Seeking a Revamp of the Concept of DAO" bit.ly/3JzLpJb #DAOs #web3community #web3legal
12
34
130
23,028
27 Dec 2022
Twitter at its worst, exemplified gloriously by none other than its lord and savior @elonmusk
1
152
26 Dec 2022
strongly recommend a nice long chat with #chatgpt3 about #resolutions
1
8
349