However, theres already indications that at least the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which is responsible for overseeing the nation's securities laws, is paying attention.
Consensus amidst crisisLast month,
the deputy director of the SECs trading and markets division, Gary Goldsholle, pointed to the hack as illustrative of his concerns over consumer protection in similar instances in the future, according to a Wall Street Journal report.
To minimize the negative impact the hack might have on those consumers, Jentzsch said a series of measures have been organized within the community.
Until the legal framework is in place, giving in to the seduction of ICOs puts you and your company at risk of a regulatory crackdown. Founders and non-ICO investors could lose everything to a big penalty.
And that risk doesnt stop at the company level. Founders and directors could be personally responsible to investors, or even face criminal charges.
So far regulators have taken a light touch, but
since The DAO debacle we know the SEC is paying attention to the crypto-equity world, and
its safe to assume that someone, somewhere is going to get hit with the regulatory hammer. Dont let it be you.