AI People joins Dubai’s Innovation One program: Declares war on the forgetting of humanity
07/22/2025 - Updated on 07/23/2025
The SEC has not moved to ban decentralized finance. It doesn’t need to. Through enforcement actions, expanding securities interpretations, and sustained regulatory uncertainty, the agency is making compliant participation progressively harder, and the industry is already changing its behaviour in response.
Most discussions around DeFi regulation focus on technical compliance:
But underneath those debates is a deeper issue: control over financial infrastructure.
DeFi protocols allow users to:
Without relying on banks, brokers, or centralized platforms.
That’s not just a technological innovation. It’s a structural challenge to how financial oversight traditionally works.
In DeFi’s early years, regulators largely treated the sector as experimental and relatively contained.
That perception has changed.
Today, decentralized protocols process billions in liquidity and increasingly overlap with traditional financial activity.
From the SEC’s perspective, that creates a problem:
But there is often no centralized entity clearly responsible for compliance or enforcement.
That’s the gap regulators are now trying to close.
Rather than banning DeFi outright, regulators appear to be pursuing something more practical: making non-compliant operation increasingly difficult.
That pressure comes through:
The effect is indirect but powerful.
Protocols may remain technically decentralized, but access to them becomes harder to maintain legally and operationally.
The core problem is that DeFi doesn’t map neatly onto existing financial categories.
In traditional finance, regulators oversee:
DeFi often replaces those functions with smart contracts running autonomously on-chain.
That creates an uncomfortable question for regulators: Who exactly is responsible when the system itself performs the financial activity?
Developers argue that decentralized protocols are software infrastructure, not financial intermediaries. Regulators increasingly disagree.
Ironically, DeFi’s transparency may be contributing to regulatory pressure.
Every transaction is visible on-chain. Liquidity flows are traceable. Wallet activity can be analyzed publicly.
That makes the ecosystem easier to monitor than many offshore financial systems.
As institutional analytics improve, regulators gain clearer visibility into:
The more visible DeFi becomes, the harder it is for regulators to ignore.
The battle over DeFi regulation is not just about digital assets. It’s about whether autonomous financial systems can exist outside traditional institutional frameworks.
If regulators succeed in forcing DeFi into existing compliance structures, the sector could evolve into something closer to:
In other words, blockchain technology without true decentralization.
Even before formal regulation arrives, the threat alone is reshaping the ecosystem:
This is how regulatory influence expands and not only through law, but through anticipation.
The chairman’s ultimatum may ultimately produce the opposite of its intended effect.
Heavy regulatory pressure could push DeFi development:
The more difficult compliant participation becomes, the stronger the incentive to remove identifiable control points entirely.
That dynamic risks escalating the very decentralization regulators are trying to contain.
At the center of this conflict is a legal and philosophical question that regulators still haven’t fully answered:
Can decentralized software itself be regulated like a financial institution?
If the answer becomes yes, DeFi changes fundamentally.
If the answer remains unclear, the conflict between regulators and decentralized infrastructure will continue intensifying.
The SEC does not need to “ban” DeFi to transform it.
It only needs to make participation difficult enough that:
That is the real power of the chairman’s ultimatum.
Not destruction through prohibition but transformation through pressure.
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