(Reuters) -The U.S. Securities and Change Fee has closed its investigation into the blockchain protocol 2.0, cryptocurrency agency Consensys mentioned in a publish on social media platform X late on Tuesday.
The agency filed a lawsuit looking for an injunction in opposition to the U.S. SEC in April over regulation of the Ethereum blockchain.
Consensys founder Joseph Lubin mentioned on Wednesday that the SEC’s resolution to shut the inquiry marked “a major victory” for Ethereum.
“Whereas we welcome this growth, it is not sufficient. We should stay vigilant and proceed advocating for clear and honest rules that allow innovation to flourish,” Lubin, who additionally co-founded the cryptocurrency ether, mentioned in a publish on X.
Consensys mentioned it can proceed its lawsuit in pursuit of a courtroom ruling that the SEC doesn’t have authorized authority to control the user-controlled software program interfaces constructed on Ethereum or the Ethereum blockchain.
An SEC spokesperson mentioned the fee doesn’t touch upon the existence or nonexistence of a attainable investigation.
The SEC final month authorized purposes from Nasdaq, CBOE and NYSE to listing spot ether ETFs. It was a shock win for the cryptocurrency business which had anticipated the SEC to reject the filings.