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The test still applies. So do the exemptions to it (some established by Congress, others by judicial action). There's no exemption for cryptocurrency staking pools.

Perhaps Coinbase's eventual appeals will establish one, but I doubt it.



This feels very hand wavy, to me. The test applies. Except where it was challenged and exemptions were codified.

Is the argument that it did apply in those situations before the exemptions?


> This feels very hand wavy, to me.

This is how the system works. "Code is law" does not apply to actual law; it's a long history of interpretation, wiggle room, precedent, legislative intent, and common sense being applied in various amounts. It works pretty well, all things considered; far more than trying to explicitly write down every little edge case.


Ah, completely agreed. But we can't lean on "it is easy, the Howey test explains all" without a huge caveat.

I will note that this particular path is treading on the "lets write down every edge case." As such, it would be better to have a slightly stronger guideline than that. Specifically, when the law is "this test, except for specific carve outs that all fail the test", that is a pretty bad law. Unless there is some unification of the carve outs other than "we decided these don't apply."




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