Lexpert Special Editions

Lexpert Special Edition – Corporate 2019

The Lexpert Special Editions profiles selected Lexpert-ranked lawyers whose focus is in Corporate, Infrastructure, Energy and Litigation law and relevant practices. It also includes feature articles on legal aspects of Canadian business issues.

Issue link: https://digital.carswellmedia.com/i/1102600

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20 LEXPERT | 2019 | WWW.LEXPERT.CA BITCOIN TRANSACTIONS IF ONLY LAW AND COMMERCE evolved in tan- dem, on a parallel timeline that yielded the cer- tainty that business craves. Unfortunately, that hopeful yearning — at least as it relates to the emerging cryptocurrency conundrum — may be more wishful than ever. In an era where rapid technological advance- ment is the order of the day — and seemingly be- coming more so each and every day — the law, reactive by necessity and restrained in its development by the need for balance among competing societal forces, cannot hope to keep up. is is especially so in the early stages of progress, where lawmakers, regulators and courts can only watch as innovation lunges and lurches at its com- mercial promise, frequently turning to capital markets to sustain its development as it seeks the forms and outlets that will give it stabil- ity and a meaningful bottom line. It's not surprising, then, that investor euphoria frequently reaches boiling points in regulatory vacuums, only to dampen when regula- tors first step in. Of necessity, these initial steps are usually tentative and transitional measures aimed at the bad apples in the capital mar- kets, but lacking the guidance that creates the certainty that propels investor confidence. In the meantime, as investors blink, the pace of innovation can suffer. So it is with cryptocurrency and its underlying blockchain plat- form. Consider, for example, that Canada was the first nation to confront the legal issues surrounding cryptocurrency when it amended its money-laundering and terrorism-financing legisla- tion to compel cryptocurrency dealers to register with the Finan- cial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FIN- TRAC), keep detailed records and report suspicious transactions. Almost five years later, final regulations have not been published, Cryptocurrency Uncertainty AS CANADIAN REGULATORS AND LEGISLATORS GET UP TO SPEED ON CRYPTOCURRENCY TECHNOLOGY, UNCERTAINTY REMAINS ABOUT HOW TO APPLY EXISTING LAWS TO IT BY JULIUS MELNITZER PHOTO: SHUTTERSTOCK

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