Cryptocurrency practitioners in Hong Kong have recently been deeply concerned about the CARF regulations. At first glance, this new rule seems to aim at regulating the market, but in reality, it might actually cause more trouble for businesses—rising operational costs, blurred legal boundaries, fines for violations often reaching tens of millions, who dares to touch it casually?



Currently, the industry's most voiced demands are as follows. First, the scope of privacy protection must be clearly defined to prevent companies from constantly falling into traps; second, the penalty mechanism should have tiers—imposing heavy fines for mistakes is unreasonable; the API reporting standards also need to be unified and clarified—it's not acceptable that each exchange understands them differently; finally, a buffer period must be provided for the industry—policies shouldn't be implemented fully the day after they are announced.

Ultimately, good regulation should protect the market without stifling innovation. If rules are too rigid, they might push compliant companies to move elsewhere. Hong Kong needs to find a balance.
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ReverseFOMOguy
· 01-22 20:25
This move in Hong Kong is truly outrageous. Who can withstand a fine in the tens of millions?
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ZKProofEnthusiast
· 01-21 22:50
Is it that CARF again? Hong Kong's recent moves are really quite aggressive.

Honestly, I wouldn't be surprised if a bunch of small exchanges move to Singapore.

The penalty mechanism alone is outrageous. Why not clarify the rules thoroughly first?
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shadowy_supercoder
· 01-20 18:42
Oh no, CARF is really amazing, the Hong Kong dollar is almost being crushed

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Isn't this a typical case of overregulation? Forcing good people to become bad

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Millions in fines? That's a joke, a small mistake directly cuts half of your assets

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Hong Kong really needs to wake up, if this continues, companies will all move to Singapore

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The key is that the rules are so vague that they threaten to kill, who understands, who understands

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No grace period at all, and they still want to keep compliant companies

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If the scope of privacy can't be clearly defined, fines will be imposed. This logic doesn't make sense

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It seems Hong Kong also needs to learn how to do it so that they can have both

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Different understandings of API standards, isn't this just causing trouble?

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It feels like the regulatory authorities didn't consult industry insiders before acting
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UnruggableChad
· 01-20 17:15
Hong Kong has really gone overboard this time. Fines of tens of millions are truly life-threatening.
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LucidSleepwalker
· 01-19 23:00
Now it's all good, time to mess around again.
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NeverPresent
· 01-19 22:59
Hong Kong's regulation is truly outstanding, pushing good companies out at a rapid pace.
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DeFi_Dad_Jokes
· 01-19 22:59
This CARF rule is really outrageous; a fine of ten million is terrifying.
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TokenomicsShaman
· 01-19 22:59
Hong Kong's recent actions are truly outrageous. Regulatory authorities want the cake and to eat it too, but companies have already moved to Singapore long ago.
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WalletDivorcer
· 01-19 22:45
Alright then, another regulatory drama. Hong Kong has really gone all out this time.
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