U.S. Consumer Finance Watchdog Wants to Oversee Major Tech, Some Crypto Payments

CoinDeskPolicyPubblicato 2023-11-06Pubblicato ultima volta 2023-11-07

Introduzione

A proposed rule would let the CFPB supervise nonbank payment providers and transactions between people, including some crypto transactions.

The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) wants to oversee large nonbank payment providers to ensure they're complying with the same laws that more traditional financial institutions abide by – and some subsectors of crypto transactions are included.

Tuesday's proposal would, if adopted, let the CFPB look after parties involved in "general-use digital consumer payment applications," the document said, including fund transfer or wallet providers if those funds are used by individuals for certain non-commercial purposes. Some digital asset transactions would be included in how the regulator defines "funds," the document said.

10

"The CFPB’s ability to monitor for emerging risks is critical as new product offerings blur the traditional lines of banking and commerce," the proposal said.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T

The document went on to list different components for how it defines consumer payment applications, including where the consumer is located (in the U.S.), that there is indeed a payment happening, that it's to someone who is not the first consumer and that the transactions "must be primarily for personal, family or household purposes."

The bulk of the rule seems focused on large technology companies that provide financial services. While the proposal doesn't explicitly name these companies, footnotes reference Venmo (owned by PayPal) and Cash App (owned by Block) as examples of person-to-person payment apps that a majority of Americans have used.

Bitcoin and other types of cryptocurrencies qualify as digital assets for the purposes of the CFPB, the document said, but the proposed rule would not cover people buying or selling cryptocurrencies, or converting them into other cryptocurrencies.

The CFPB is publishing a request for feedback on various parts of the proposal, asking the general public to email the regulator or go to regulations.gov.


Letture associate

Google's 'Reasoning King' Also Departs for Meta, Originally Recruited by Fei-Fei Li

"Google's 'King of Reasoning' Leaves for Meta, Quietly Departing After Over Eight Years. Denny Zhou, a key figure behind Google's AI reasoning advancements including work showcased by CEO Sundar Pichai, has joined Meta's MSL as a research scientist. His low-profile move, discovered via a LinkedIn update, occurred months before the high-profile departures of Noam Shazeer to OpenAI and Nobel laureate John Jumper to Anthropic. Zhou was originally recruited to Google by Fei-Fei Li's China center initiative after nearly 11 years at Microsoft. This is part of a significant talent drain at Google, with top researchers like Shazeer (co-author of the Transformer paper) and Jumper (AlphaFold lead) recently leaving for rivals. Reports suggest internal friction is a contributing factor, particularly around Google's strategic shift. The company has reportedly formed a high-priority 'AI Coding Strike Team,' involving co-founder Sergey Brin, to urgently bridge the gap in AI coding agents, potentially reallocating resources and focus away from other research directions like DeepMind's 'world model' AGI approach. This pivot towards commercially-proven coding applications may have influenced departures, as hinted by Shazeer's comment about his compute allocation being given to another team. Meanwhile, Meta continues to bolster its team, also recently hiring UC Berkeley professor and 'security godmother' Dawn Song, along with her startup Virtue AI team, as a VP of AI research."

marsbit1 h fa

Google's 'Reasoning King' Also Departs for Meta, Originally Recruited by Fei-Fei Li

marsbit1 h fa

Trading

Spot
活动图片