Been watching this regulatory tango pretty closely, and there's a meaningful shift happening behind the scenes. A heavyweight coalition in the crypto and defi space just made a coordinated push at the SEC, and it signals how serious the infrastructure builders have gotten about legal certainty.



So here's what went down. The DeFi Education Fund, Aave Labs, Uniswap Labs, Paradigm, and Andreessen Horowitz—basically the major players who actually build the ecosystem—fired off a joint letter this week responding to the SEC's April 13 guidance on non-custodial interfaces. The staff essentially said that front ends which just convert user instructions into blockchain commands without taking custody don't need broker registration. Makes sense, right? They're just software, not intermediaries.

But here's the catch. That guidance is temporary. It expires in 2031 if the Commission doesn't act. For teams making multi-year infrastructure bets, a five-year window isn't enough. So the coalition is pushing the SEC to turn this into actual binding rules—hard-coded definitions that explicitly protect neutral software providers, validators, RPC operators, oracle networks, and cloud infrastructure from being swept into the broker definition.

The risk they're flagging is real. Without clear technology-neutral rules, future staff or commissioners could reinterpret the broker definition however they want. That kind of regulatory whiplash is exactly what pushes innovation offshore. You've got crypto developers already spooked about operating in the US; vague guidance that could flip in a few years doesn't help.

Timing matters too. The CLARITY Act—the main federal crypto bill—is stalled in the Senate and facing a late-May deadline. So the SEC's rulebook has become the only realistic lever for near-term clarity. Legal memos from Sidley, Jones Day, and Deloitte have all highlighted that the April 13 statement is a start, but it only addresses broker rules, not exchange registration, AML, or fraud liability. The infrastructure still needs more.

What I find interesting is how this reflects a maturation of the defi movement. Instead of just building in the shadows, these projects are now engaging directly with regulators, trying to shape frameworks that actually work for decentralized infrastructure. Whether the SEC moves on this depends on political will, but the coalition's letter makes clear that legal certainty for US-based defi infrastructure now depends on how a 90-year-old broker definition gets applied to modern code. That's the bottleneck.
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