#CryptoPH Community Reacts to SEC’s Final Rules on Crypto-Asset Service Providers
The crypto industry responds to the SEC’s sweeping CASP Rules that raised the issues over education, transparency, and influencer accountability.
The crypto industry responds to the SEC’s sweeping CASP Rules that raised the issues over education, transparency, and influencer accountability.
Join us for a live webcast as we break down what the rules actually say, what they mean for content creators, startups, and crypto communities, and how they could reshape the local crypto scene.
The SEC’s proposed rules aim to classify most crypto-related content, including airdrops, events, and tutorials, as marketing under tighter regulation.
DvCode CEO Eliezer Rabadon and CryptoArt PH Co-Founder Jopet Arias encourage Filipinos to send feedback on the SEC’s revised CASP guidelines during a BitPinas webcast, citing the importance of public participation in shaping crypto regulations.
From Worldcoin activities in Metro Manila to BitPinas Webcast, here are some of the crypto news from the Philippines from last week April 14 – 20, 2025). Davao LGU Trains Developers in Blockchain From April 7–11, 2025, the Davao City Local Government Unit (LGU) hosted the ICP Code Camp, a five-day immersive boot camp transforming…
The SEC’s new draft CASP rules add a registration exemption, remove marketing rules, and open the StratBox to crypto firms.
The BitPinas Webcast is a weekly livestream series produced by BitPinas, the longest standing crypto publication in the Philippines.
The proposed issuance, now titled “SEC Guidelines on the Operations of Crypto-Assets Service Providers,” removes or revises several high-level policy sections from the original “SEC Rules on Crypto-Assets Service Providers,” in favor of highly detailed technical and compliance guidelines.
Atty. Padilla is supporting the SEC’s draft rules on marketing crypto assets, emphasizing the importance of honest promotions while holding misleading platforms accountable.
Crypto lawyer Atty. Rafael Padilla warns that certain proposed SEC rules might put grants from global blockchain companies for local web3 projects at risk.