Today the SEC notified the court that it โ...does not intend to file an amended complaint...โ and their deadline to do so has expired. The Court previously dismissed the SECโs entire case. Richard Heart, PulseChain, PulseX, and HEX have defeated the SEC completely and have achieved regulatory clarity that nearly no other coins have. They're now safer to work with in ways that almost no other coins are. The SEC walked away from some other cryptocurrency cases voluntarily, but this is the only case where the SEC lost and crypto won across the board, with a dismissal in court of every single claim the SEC brought.
This is a victory for open-source software, cryptocurrency, and free speech. The SEC actually sued software code itself in this case, claiming it could be an alter ego of a person. This would have set a terrible precedent and caused perhaps multiple billions of dollars of damage to the vital open source and free software industry that powers most of the Internet and your speech on it.
PulseChain just won big in court that it's not a security and has had flawless operation since launch 662 days ago. A top on chain DEX volume chain in the world. 47,000 validators, over $100M bridged in and deca-millions of stables.
Now is the time for YOU to contact only these large entities to support PulseChain. Small exchanges get hacked too often. It's easy to integrate as an ETH fork and has a couple great free RPCs too.
Of these I wish @krakenfx would list first, as I've heard good things about their support and their founder. @coinbase is doing great with lobbying.
Large cold wallets:
@binance@okx@paoloardoino@novogratz@robinhood@revolut@grayscale@Gate_io @bitgetglobal @DeribitExchange@cryptocom @bitstamp @kucoincom@swissborg@gemini@bitbank_inc@coinone@bitFlyer
Most of you "industry" people have such pitiful security, you just don't listen to the good advice I give you. Stop praying someone doesn't push a malicious auto update at you. Stop hoping someone doesn't malicious update a dependency you're not smart enough to have pinned (locked.) Stop hoping someone doesn't push a malicious update to some front end you use, or server you use that isn't your own. Host your own code on your own computer man. Don't let other people serve malware to users by loading things off servers not your own... Or better yet, let them just run the code themselves. No one really needs your server. Welcome to actual decentralization.
Stop throwing away the free advice I give you, enough billions have been lost to hacks because you don't follow the good advice I give you. No auto updates. Host your own dependencies or pin. Not your server not your code. This is really, truly actually easy stuff to do.
@BenArmstrongsX I support $Pulsechain, but unfortunately I haven't seen any tweets from you about this project in a while. Are there any reasons for that?