SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce just dropped a statement that's getting attention across crypto circles. She's calling self-custody and financial privacy fundamental freedoms—not privileges to be debated. For an agency that's been scrutinizing the space heavily, hearing a voice from within advocate for these core principles feels significant. Peirce has consistently pushed back against overreach, and this latest comment reinforces her stance: users should have the right to control their own assets and maintain privacy in their financial dealings. It's a reminder that not everyone at the regulatory table sees crypto through the same lens.
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PumpBeforeRug
· 11-30 04:52
Peirce is really on top of things, she sees clearly in the SEC... we must fight for self-custody rights to the end.
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MEVHunter
· 11-30 04:51
peirce gets it, but let's be real—self-custody means nothing if the mempool's already front-running your tx before it settles. her words are clean, but the infrastructure's still toxic as hell. privacy on-chain? laughable when block builders are literally sandwiching every move.
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unrekt.eth
· 11-30 04:51
Peirce is really the only one awake in the SEC; self-custody and privacy should be basic human rights, why does it still need to be discussed? What’s wrong with those other regulators?
SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce just dropped a statement that's getting attention across crypto circles. She's calling self-custody and financial privacy fundamental freedoms—not privileges to be debated. For an agency that's been scrutinizing the space heavily, hearing a voice from within advocate for these core principles feels significant. Peirce has consistently pushed back against overreach, and this latest comment reinforces her stance: users should have the right to control their own assets and maintain privacy in their financial dealings. It's a reminder that not everyone at the regulatory table sees crypto through the same lens.