Cryptocurrency Airdrops and Bounty Campaigns Face SEC Hammer

Published on by Cryptoslate | Published on

The regulatory scrutiny over ICOs has led to the arrival of token "Airdrops," or free tokens in exchange for a few marketing efforts.

A recent ruling by the SEC may end this augmenting form of generating hype for many cryptocurrency projects in the U.S.SEC Not Impressed.

A cease-and-desist order was later made public and cryptocurrency communities were quick to note a key detail of the SEC's order: "Free" tokens were considered securities.

Tomahawk's token issuance was said to violate Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act by "Selling TOM tokens in the absence of a registered statement." The court highlighted Tomahawk's use of bounty campaigns and other marketing activities were "Designed to foster the company's economic interests" in addition to potentially causing market manipulation for its tokens.

The absence of regulations means cryptocurrency entrepreneurs have been offering airdrops and bounty campaigns immune to security laws.

Some crypto-enthusiasts ascertain the SEC's issue is not cryptocurrencies, but the wayward process of token distribution.

Needless to say, the SEC stepped in to change the company's core business ideals, putting in a formal request to shift from a digital share-rewards system to a cash-based incentive process.

Moving forward-now that token issuers and ICOs are viewed as taboo by the U.S. lawmakers-it is expected that airdrops and bounty campaigns face comparable legal action and certain levels of scrutiny.

"In certain ways, people are getting free lottery tickets. There will be a tsunami of airdrops this year."

A glance at airdrop collation site Airdrops.io provides evidence to Roszak's words: There are thousands of airdrops and bounty programs listed.

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