Blockchain

Russian crypto regulation in works

There has been a mixed reaction to President Vladimir Putin’s push for crypto and ICO regulation. He has been criticised by some local experts for what they see as an unnecessarily heavy handed approach, although others have given him their cautious backing.

“In terms of blockchain legislation, Russia is still at the inceptive stage,” says Alan Wong, Senior Vice President APAC, Storiqa, which has developed a blockchain powered e-commerce marketplace. “We are seeing legislature development by the Russian government and we are still at the draft stage. There is no indication when the specific frameworks will be announced. However, one thing is beneficial; expedient final laws to guide the blockchain space will give further impetus and guidance for the industry.”

Crypto controversy

Blockchain is starting to penetrate many areas of Russian life. But, as is often the case with new, disruptive technologies, controversy is never far away, fuelling calls for regulation. The Russian Association of Cryptocurrencies and Blockchain recently created a registry of whitelisted companies that offer crypto-related products or services. It says that, since early 2018, legal entities and individuals in Russia have lost more than 270 million rubles [US$4.3 million] from crypto-related investments organised by scammers and incompetent companies.

“The list of trusted companies will allow Russian and foreign market participants to base their work on trusted organisations and minimise the risk of fraud in the creation and development of Russian or foreign business in the field of mining, trading with cryptocurrency, blockchain technology and ICOs,” it says.

The hope is that regulation etc brings stability without derailing Russia’s flourishing startup community. Storiqa’s Wong comments: “Russia is a leader in blockchain product development. ICOs are a natural development where fund raising as a crowdfunding platform is efficient but there is a deep need to validate and verify the projects and background of teams.”

He adds: “The talent and domain knowledge in Russia in IT and AI is very advanced. Storiqa’s development team is based in Moscow but we have registered offices in Hong Kong and Singapore. They are the two top hubs in Asia. We have started business initiatives in both cities and recently at the RISE conference in Hong Kong, we shared what our Storiqa Wallet prototype offers.”

Watch this space for regular updates on both regulation around blockchain in Russia and the country’s flourishing startup scene.

Scott Thompson

Scott has been working in technology and business journalism for nearly 20 years, with a focus on FinTech, retail, payments and disruptive technology. He has been Editor of such titles as FStech, Retail Systems and IBS Journal and also contributed to the likes of Retail Technology Innovation Hub, PaymentEye, bobsguide, Essential Retail, Open Banking Hub, TechHQ and Internet of Business.

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

Kwenta and Perennial Kickstart Arbitrum Expansion with 1.9M ARB

Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands, 26th July 2024, Chainwire

11 months ago

Ethereum could soon surpass the 3K price point

As usual, the crypto market is keeping everyone guessing what could happen next. After an…

11 months ago

Agoric Unveils Orchestration for Next-Gen Web3 Applications

San Francisco, United States / California, 10th July 2024, Chainwire

11 months ago

Solciety’s PolitiFi Meme Coin Presale Raises $600K+ in First Two Weeks

London, United Kingdom, 2nd July 2024, Chainwire

12 months ago

PrimeXBT to democratise financial markets with total revamp and upgraded product offering

Majuro, Marshall Islands, May 22nd, 2024, ChainwireLeading Cryptocurrency broker, PrimeXBT, has just launched a total…

1 year ago