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More SEC Case Updates

Late Friday, attorneys with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and Binance filed a joint status report asking a federal judge to continue a 60-day pause in the case for another 60 days.
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Who’s left?
The narrative
We heard about two more Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) cases this week. The first, Binance and the SEC, was last paused in February, though late Friday attorneys asked for another extension to continue discussing matters. Separately, Nova Labs settled allegations with the regulator.
Why it matters
As we continue to watch the SEC develop its new views on digital asset issues, how it treats its active litigation remains a key signal.
Breaking it down
On Friday, attorneys with the SEC and Binance (as well as Binance founder Changpeng Zhao, Binance.US and other parties) filed a joint motion asking the federal judge overseeing the case to extend a pause originally set to expire Monday by another 60 days.
Originally, the SEC said it was requesting the pause to see how the agency’s new crypto task force might address digital assets and the application of securities laws. Friday’s filing echoed this argument, saying the task force’s work «may impact» its claims in the ongoing litigation. The original pause was set to end on April 14.
The SEC also filed a motion for a consent judgement after apparently coming to a settlement agreement with Nova Labs, the company behind Helium. According to the proposal, Nova Labs would pay $200,000 but would not admit to or deny the allegations.
The SEC first sued Nova Labs in January 2025 — specifically, Jan. 17, 2025, three days before Donald Trump was sworn into office as the 47th U.S. President.
I imagine there are more cases or investigations being resolved than CoinDesk has caught — if you’ve received a Wells Notice and that’s now been resolved, please hit us up, we’re very curious. You can reply to this email or reach out on Telegram and Signal.
Stories you may have missed
DOJ Axes Crypto Unit as Trump’s Regulatory Pullback Continues: The Departmetn of Justice disbanded its National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team and ordered prosecutors not to bring a case where it may find itself adjudicating what a security or commodity is in the digital assets sector. More on this next week.
Inside North Korea’s Favorite Crypto Laundering Tool: THORChain: THORChain and wallets built on the network have become increasingly favored by North Korean hackers looking to move funds stolen from other crypto projects. The network’s operators have refused to block transactions tied to the Bybit theft from February.
SEC Approves Trading of Ether ETF Options: The SEC has not yet approved any new exchange-traded products for tokens like Solana or Litecoin ETFs but it did green-light ether ETF options trading this week.
New SEC Staff Statement Urges Detailed Crypto Token Disclosures: The latest SEC staff statement, which came out a day before its second roundtable discussion, focused on the details it’s observed in disclosures from crypto companies launching registered security products.
Atkins Confirmed by U.S. Senate to Take Over SEC Formerly Run by Gensler: Speaking of the SEC, the Senate confirmed Trump’s nominee for chair Paul Atkins, though he hadn’t been sworn in by 1:00 p.m. ET Friday.
Former Ethereum Developer Virgil Griffith Leaves Prison, Seeks Pardon: Virgil Griffith, an Ethereum developer who pleaded guilty to violating sanctions law and was sentenced to 56 months in prison, has been released to a halfway house and is now seeking a pardon, one of his attorneys said.
President Trump Signs Resolution Erasing IRS Crypto Rule Targeting DeFi: U.S. President Donald Trump signed the joint House and Senate resolution overturning the IRS’ DeFi broker rule under the Congressional Review Act, meaning the IRS can never bring a similar rule forth again. This is the first crypto-specific, Congressionally-passed item Trump has signed since taking office, marking a milestone for the crypto industry.
1 In 5 Cross-Chain Crypto Investigations Involve More Than 10 Blockchains, Elliptic Finds: Blockchain analytics firm Elliptic said 20% of its investigations into funds sent across multiple chains now involve at least 10 different networks.
Ripple and SEC File Joint Motion to Pause Appeals: Ripple and the SEC have filed a joint motion to pause their ongoing appeals, following on from last month’s announcement that the parties came to an agreement to resolve the case entirely.
Block Agrees to $40M Settlement With New York Over Faulty Money-Laundering Controls: Block and the New York Attorney General’s office settled allegations that Block did not have a fully functioning anti-money laundering process for its Cash App.
Judge Rules Against Most of DCG’s Motion to Dismiss NYAG’s Civil Securities Fraud Suit: A New York state judge tossed out two of the New York Attorney General’s claims against Digital Currency Group and its executives but allowed most of the case to proceed in a late Friday ruling.
This week
Wednesday
14:00 UTC (10:00 a.m. ET) The House Financial Services Committee held a hearing to discuss issues ahead of an expected market structure bill addressing crypto.
18:00 UTC (2:00 p.m. ET) The House Agriculture Committee also held a hearing on similar topics.
Thursday
14:00 UTC (10:00 a.m. ET) The Senate Banking Committee held a confirmation hearing on a raft of nominees, including Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision nominee Michelle Bowman. While she received a few questions about reviewing the regulatory response to Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse, there was not anything substantive around crypto during the hearing.
14:30 UTC (10:30 a.m. ET) The court overseeing the Department of Justice’s case against Do Kwon held a status conference hearing, where his trial was rescheduled to February 2026. Prosecutors said the DOJ memo from earlier this week would have no bearing on the case.
Friday
17:00 UTC (1:00 p.m. ET) The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission held its second crypto roundtable, this time on trading rules. Acting SEC Chair Mark Uyeda, in recorded remarks, suggested that the agency could look at an interim regulatory framework for companies until it has more permanent rules in place.
Elsewhere:
(CNN) On Monday, pseudonymous X (formerly Twitter) accounts posted about a «90-day pause in tariffs» that sent markets soaring, before the White House denied the claim, which may have been based on a misinterpretation of White House official Kevin Hassett’s response to a question during a Fox News interview.
(CNN) On Wednesday, U.S. President Donald Trump did announce a 90-day pause in the higher tariff rates against most countries, leaving in place the 10% tariff rate he first announced last week. Tariff rates on China went up to 125% (later clarified to 145%).
(CNBC) The U.S. stock market had a «historically wild week» with swings up and down as traders reacted to the possible effects new U.S. tariffs might have on global trade.
(Reuters) Aircraft parts manufacturer Howmet Aerospace, based in Pittsburgh, warned customers that U.S. tariffs might cause it to halt some shipments.
(Bloomberg) Website owners said Google’s new AI-generated answers feature has cratered traffic to their websites, though Google is denying this.
If you’ve got thoughts or questions on what I should discuss next week or any other feedback you’d like to share, feel free to email me at nik@coindesk.com or find me on Bluesky @nikhileshde.bsky.social.
You can also join the group conversation on Telegram.
See ya’ll next week!
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Luxor’s Aaron Foster on Bitcoin Mining’s Growing Sophistication

Luxor Technology wants to make bitcoin mining easier. That’s why the firm has rolled out a panoply of products (mining pools, hashrate derivatives, data analytics, ASIC brokerage) to help bitcoin miners, large and small, develop their operations.
Aaron Forster, the company’s director of business development, joined in October 2021, and has seen the team grow from roughly 15 to 85 people in the span of three and a half years.
Forster worked a decade in the Canadian energy sector before coming to bitcoin mining, which is one of the reasons why he’ll be speaking about the future of mining in Canada and the U.S. at the BTC & Mining Summit at Consensus this year.
Follow full coverage of Consensus 2025 in Toronto May 14-16.
In the leadup to the event, Forster shared with CoinDesk his thoughts on bitcoin miners turning to artificial intelligence, the growing sophistication of the mining industry, and how Luxor’s products enable miners to hedge various forms of risk.
This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.
CoinDesk: Mining pools allow miners to combine their computational resources to have higher chances of receiving bitcoin block rewards. Can you explain to us how Luxor’s mining pools work?
Aaron Forster: Mining pools are basically aggregators that reduce the variance of solo mining. When you look at solo mining, it’s very lottery-esque, meaning that you could be plugging your machines in and you might hit block rewards tomorrow — or you might hit it 100 years from now. But you’re still paying for energy during that time. At a small scale, it’s not a big deal, as you scale that up and create a business around it.
The most common kind of mining pool is PPLNS, which means Pay-Per-Last-N-Shares. Basically, that means the miner does not get paid unless that mining pool hits the block. That’s also due to luck variance, so it’s no different from that solo miner’s situation. However, that creates revenue volatility for those large industrial miners.
So we’re seeing the emergence of what we call Full-Pay-Per-Share, or FPPS, and that’s Luxor is operating for our bitcoin pool. With FPPS, regardless of whether we find a block or not, we’re still paying our miners their revenue based on the number of shares they’ve submitted to the pool. That gives revenue certainty to miners, assuming hashprice stays the same. We’ve effectively become an insurance provider.
The problem is that you need a very deep and strong balance sheet to support that model, because while we’ve reduced the variance for miners, that risk is now put on us. So we need to plan for that. But it can be calculated over a long enough period of time. We have different partners in that regard, so that we don’t bear the full risk from our balance sheet.
Tell me about your ASIC brokerage business.
We’ve become one of the leading hardware suppliers on the secondary market. Primarily within North America, but we’ve shipped to 35+ countries. We deal with everybody from public companies to private companies, institutions to retail.
We’re primarily a broker, meaning we match buyer and seller, mostly on the secondary market. Sometimes we do interact with ASIC manufacturers, and in certain cases we do take principal positions, meaning we use money from our balance sheet to purchase ASICs and then resell them on the secondary market. But the majority of our volume comes from matching buyers and sellers.
Luxor also launched the first hashrate futures contracts.
We’re trying to push the Bitcoin mining space forward. We’re a hashrate marketplace, depending on how you look at our mining pools, and we wanted to take a big leap and take hashrate to the TradFi world.
We wanted to create a tool that allows investors to take a position on hashprice without effectively owning mining equipment. Hashprice is, you know, the hourly or daily revenue that miners get, and that fluctuates a lot. For some people it’s about hedging, for others it’s speculation. We’re creating a tool for miners to sell their hashrate forward and use it as a basic collateral or a way to finance growth.
We said, ‘Let’s allow miners to basically sell forward hashrate, receive bitcoin upfront, and then they can take that and do whatever they need to do with it, whether it’s purchase ASICs or expand their mining operations.’ It’s basically the collateralization of hashrate. So they’re obligated to send us X amount of hashrate per month for the length of the contract. Before that, they’ll receive a certain amount of bitcoin upfront.
There’s a market imbalance between buyers and sellers. We have a lot of buyers, meaning people and institutions wanting to earn yield on their bitcoin. What you’re lending your bitcoin at is effectively your interest rate. However, you could also look at it like you’re purchasing that hashrate at a discount. That’s important for institutions or folks that don’t want physical exposure to bitcoin mining, but want exposure to hash price or hashrate. They can do that synthetically through purchasing bitcoin and putting it into our market, effectively lending that out, earning a yield, and purchasing that hashrate at a discount.
What do you find most exciting about bitcoin mining at the moment?
The acceptance and natural progression of our industry into other markets. We can’t ignore the AI HPC transition. Instead of building these mega mines that are just massive buildings with power-dense bitcoin mining operations, you’re starting to see large miners turning into power infrastructure providers for artificial intelligence.
Using bitcoin mining as a stepping stone to a larger, more capital intensive industry like AI is exciting to me, because it kind of gives us a bit more acceptance, because we’re coming at it from a completely different angle. I think the biggest example is the Core Scientific / CoreWeave deal structure, how they’ve kind of merged those two businesses together. They’re complimentary to each other. And that’s really exciting.
When you look at our own product roadmap, we have no choice but to follow a similar roadmap to bitcoin miners. A lot of the products that we built for the mining industry are analogous to what is needed at a different level for AI. Mind you, it’s a lot simpler in our industry than in AI. We’re our first step into the HPC space, and it’s still very early days there.
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Crypto’s Biggest Barrier to Adoption? It’s Not Regulation — It’s UX

As the crypto industry matures, much of the focus remains on regulation, custody, and scalability. But in 2025, the biggest barrier to adoption isn’t policy — it’s user experience. Crypto’s interfaces are still too complex for everyday users. From managing seed phrases to deciphering blockchain transactions, onboarding feels more like navigating a maze than joining a financial revolution. Wallets remain fragmented, unintuitive, and risky.
To reach mainstream adoption, the industry must prioritize usability — making wallets and financial tools more accessible — without compromising the core principles of decentralization. Until then, poor UX will continue to hold crypto back.
Vitalik Buterin’s Call for Account Abstraction
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has been one of the most vocal proponents for improving the usability of crypto wallets. His critique centers on the fact that wallets are designed with developers, not end-users, in mind. While technical innovations in blockchain security are advancing, wallets often remain rooted in outdated models that prioritize control over ease of use, leaving the average user overwhelmed and vulnerable to mistakes.
Buterin’s proposed solution (EIP-7702), account abstraction, is a breakthrough concept that could reshape how we interact with crypto assets. Account abstraction allows smart contract functionality to be applied to externally owned accounts (EOAs), the most common type of wallet used in crypto. This would enable more intuitive and flexible security mechanisms, such as social recovery, multi-signature support, and customizable authentication methods, without compromising decentralization or self-custody.
At its core, account abstraction decouples the traditional reliance on a single private key for securing assets, creating the potential for much more user-friendly experiences. Rather than expecting users to memorize long and complex seed phrases or manage multi-step transactions, account abstraction can allow for recovery options, automatic transaction approvals, and even the option to delegate certain actions to trusted contacts — without ever losing ownership of the private keys.
A Call for Human-Centered Design in Crypto
Crypto’s UX problem isn’t just about cleaner interfaces — it’s about rethinking design to prioritize human needs. Historically, tools have been built for power users comfortable with seed phrases and command-line interfaces. But for mass adoption, crypto must serve people who’ve never held a private key.
This is where human-centered design becomes essential. Developers must build wallets and tools that are intuitive, context-aware, and focused on user safety. The shift must move from catering to the technically inclined to empowering everyday users who are new to crypto. To succeed, wallets need to embrace the following core design principles:
Smart Defaults and Progressive Onboarding: Users should not need to dive into settings or security configurations to get started. Newcomers should be able to start using a wallet with minimal friction, but with built-in guidance and the option to unlock more advanced features as they become more familiar with the space. By providing clear default security settings — such as social recovery options and automatic transaction limits — wallets can offer both ease of use and security from the outset.
Clear, Intuitive Signing Processes: Transaction signing should be straightforward, with clear explanations of what users are agreeing to. If a user is about to approve a transaction that could drain their wallet, this should be prominently displayed in plain language, not buried under hexadecimal codes or complex jargon. Reducing ambiguity in these interactions will help mitigate the risks of scams and human error.
Social and Multi-party Recovery Systems: Relying solely on seed phrases as a recovery method is an outdated and risky practice. Instead, wallets should adopt social recovery systems, where users can designate trusted parties to help restore access to their wallet in case of lost keys. This approach not only makes wallets more resilient but also adds a layer of user trust and security.
Built-In Education and Contextual Help: To truly empower users, crypto wallets need to include educational tools directly within the interface. Contextual prompts, tooltips, and interactive tutorials can help users understand the significance of each action they take, without overwhelming them with dense technical documentation.
Automation with Control: Features like auto-payment for transaction fees or the ability to batch transactions can make using crypto wallets much more intuitive, especially for newcomers. But these features must be balanced with user control. Users should have the final say over transactions, but automation can help reduce some of the cognitive load that crypto novices experience.
The Future of Crypto Is Usability and Security—Without Compromise
As crypto moves forward, the real challenge will be to reconcile usability with the core tenets of decentralization and security. Innovations like account abstraction are promising, but the industry must continue to prioritize human-centered design. The goal should be to design tools that make crypto accessible, secure, and simple — without sacrificing self-custody or decentralization.
The future of crypto will not be determined by how fast blockchains can scale or how complex DeFi protocols can get; it will be defined by whether the average person can use crypto with confidence. Until then, crypto will remain an exclusive tool for developers and enthusiasts, rather than a technology that empowers the masses.
The question is simple: Can crypto be both intuitive and secure, or will it continue to be a space designed only for the technically proficient? The answer will determine whether crypto achieves its promise of financial freedom for all.
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Where Top VCs Think Crypto x AI Is Headed Next

The proliferation of mainstream artificial intelligence (AI) tools in the last couple of years has stirred the crypto and blockchain industry to explore decentralized alternatives to Big Tech products.
The synergy between AI and blockchain is built on addressing the risk of centralized ownership and access to data that powers AI. The theory goes that decentralization can mitigate against the entire AI economy being powered by the data owned by a few tech behemoths like Alphabet (GOOG), Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), Alibaba (9988) and Tencent (0700).
It is unclear as yet whether or not this will prove to be a significant problem at all, much less whether the blockchain industry will be able to solve it. What is clear, however, is that crypto venture capitalists (VCs) are willing to spend millions of dollars finding out. Decentralized AI has thus far attracted $917 million in VC and private equity money, according to startup deal platform Tracxn.
The question remains whether the trend of investing in blockchain-based AI is still built on hype or has now transcended to being the real deal.
Blockchain investment company Theta Capital described AI x crypto as «the inevitable backbone of AI,» in a recent «Satellite View» report, which explored insights and outlooks from the sector’s prominent investors.
AI agents
«No trend stands out more than the intersection of AI and crypto,» the report said, using the examples of AI agents trading on blockchains and even launching tokens.
This may appear to be a more sophisticated form of speculation for degens, but Theta argues it’s a route to tackling some of AI’s problems that only crypto can solve.
«Crypto wallets enable the participation of autonomous agents in financial markets,» according to the report. «Decentralized token networks are bootstrapping the supply side of key AI infrastructure for compute, data and energy.»
The report’s conclusion is far from being hype and speculation; AI x crypto is «the new meta.» Meta is short for «metagame,» a term borrowed from gaming referring to the dominant way of playing with regard to characters, strategies or moves based on the competitive landscape.
Decentralized AI
Alex Pack, managing partner of blockchain venture capital firm Hack VC, described Web3 AI as «the biggest source of alpha in investing today,» in the «Satellite View» report.
Hack VC has dedicated 41% of its latest fund to Web3 AI, according to the report, in which it sees the main challenge as building a decentralized alternative to the AI economy.
«AI’s rapid evolution is creating massive efficiencies, but also increasing centralization,» Pack said.
«The intersection of crypto and AI is by far the biggest investment opportunity in the space, offering an open, decentralized alternative.»
One of Hack VC’s most prominent portfolio companies is Grass, which encourages users to participate in AI networks by offering up their unused internet bandwidth in return for tokens.
This is designed as an alternative to large firms installing software code into apps in order to scrape their users’ data.
«Users unwittingly donate their bandwidth without compensation,» Grass founder Andrej Radonjic said in Theta’s report.
«Grass provides an alternative [by] forming a massive opt-in, peer-to-peer network able to produce high-quality data at the scale of Google and Microsoft.»
The dreaded AI «takeover»
Decentralized AI presents risks for investors, Theta concedes. It could lead to the proliferation of all the least desirable facets of the internet as it already exists: putrid online discourse, spam emails or vapid social media content in the form of blogs, videos or memes. In the crypto world, an example of this may be the creation of meme tokens. The questionable endorsements, the wash trading and the pump and dumps can all be handled by AI engines even more efficiently than humans.
Some VCs see blockchain as the basis for mitigation. Olaf Carlson-Wee, CEO and founder of Polychain, provided the examples of proof-of-humanity mechanisms to verify that users are human and disincentivizing spam through micropayments or spam.
«If sending an email costs $0.01, it would destroy the economics of spam while remaining affordable for average users,» he said in the report.
With blockchain possibly providing some of these safeguards, Carlson-Wee believes AI will underpin digital and financial systems, as they could outperform humans in markets. This reality, he claims, would be gladly accepted, as opposed to dreaded as some sort of bleak dystopia.
«Over time, AI systems will evolve into long-term capital allocators, predicting trends and opportunities years into the future, [which] humans will entrust their funds to, because of the superior ability to make data-driven decisions,» Carlson-Wee said.
«The AI takeover won’t be a war we lose — it will be a suggestion we agree to,» he concluded.
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