The regulation of cryptography quickly becomes the decisive factor in the way digital currencies, AI and financial systems shape the next era of global influence.
While technology continues to go beyond legal frameworks, finance and technology leaders realize that innovation alone is not enough. Stables generating billions, digital assets treated as obsolete liabilities and platforms focused on AI pushing against inherited borders signal the same truth: without clarity of cryptography regulation, momentum stands. The race does not concern which is built the fastest, it is a question of knowing who builds in systems which can evolve in complete safety, legally and in the world.
In this week’s episode of TheCube, John Furrier by Thecube Research (photo, left) and Vellant Dave (right) decompose the way in which the future of cryptographic regulations are deeply linked to national sovereignty, the renewal of Wall Street IPO and the center of gravity of semiconductor and supercomputing. From the viability of stablescoin to the geopolitical implications of flea design, their conversation depicts a detailed map of the place where innovation meets the infrastructure and what happens when the policy is late.
“We said it would be a cold war, but I think it must be more open – communications without borders, trade without borders,” said Furrier.
The momentum of the AI and the regulation of cryptography quickly converge
In today’s technological climate, AI accelerates adoption in vertical industries, while crypto remains tangled in obsolete accounting systems and legal legal angles. Stablecoins, for example, reject billions of income while being treated as intangible assets under the inherited rules. The real traction requires new legislation and cryptographic regulation to correspond to the pace of innovation, according to Furrier and Vellant.
“You talked about technology. You talked about treasury bills, but you talked about the entire cryptography market,” said Vellant, referring to a recent interview that Furrier had with Tom Lee, director of investments at Fuststrat Capital LLC. “He talked about yield. He explained why the Stablecoins are so attractive. He talked about his fund, which won a hundred million dollars in cash per year. I mean, just a fantastic work. No rehearsal of what you get on CNBC.”
Even if Wall Street shows signs of renewed Introduction activity, especially among cryptographic companies, the uncertainty of cryptographic regulation remains the main slowdown. Without concrete advice on how digital assets are classified, taxed and managed, the main players are forced to navigate risks with ambiguity, said Furrier.
“They will put the railings, put all the KYC, all these governance, the things that might need to be in there. Once it’s there, it’s going to be gone for the races,” said Furrier. “There are all these regulatory and obsolete processes and procedures of the old school which will be disrupted by the cryptographic revolution.”
Inside the nyse: Momentum is built around innovation
During the week, Furrier and Vellant were on site at the New York Stock Exchange for Thecube + Nyse Wired: Medtech Unplugged Series, where optimism with regard to technology -oriented growth was tangible. According to Furrier, opinion leaders joining exclusive conversations with TheCube, the atmosphere reflected a mixture of market recovery and future preparation.
“What a busy week. We were here at the NYSE Cube Studios for the NYSE program and a lot of action on the news,” he said. “You saw that Intel had their earnings yesterday. Big Story. I think it is enormous for industry when we rely as national defense, national sovereignty, the AI breed is activated.”
The NYSE has also welcomed new developments in the life sciences and Medtech, indicating that the boom of innovation is not limited to crypto and flea. IT AI and Edge have been highlighted and how they help emerging medical devices to bypass regulatory strangles, to open new commercial opportunities with fewer constraints, added Furrier.
“The health technology is enormous, Medtech grows, organic is complaining, digital health is booming,” he said. “I think that the demand for products will be considerably high compared to providers and consumers. I predict that all health care emissions, IMS, Medtech, digital health, health technology, will all be business emissions.
National sovereignty, chips and economic realignment
The conversation has also extended to semiconductors and sovereignty, traces a line between the computing power and the geopolitical lever effect. While Intel Corp. has trouble recovering relevance, nvidia corp. And Advanced Micro Devices Inc. continue to gain ground. But the overview, according to Furrier and Vellant, is not only flea, it is a question of knowing whether the United States can lead both in manufacturing and monetary innovation at the same time.
“If you do not look, and that is why I like what David Sacks does on the Trump administration, he concentrates like a laser on the key policies of AI and crypto to inaugurate the legislation,” said Furrier. “Because without policy and legislative, banks and all these executions, you cannot have regulated industries without policy or law.”
While some fear overcoming or deregulation with political reasons, the lack of politics is just as dangerous. The economy of cryptography, like the Internet before it, is global by design. Without sovereign structure, innovation could be exported, or worse, co -opted.
“We got our heads in AI,” said Vellant. “I usually have the impression that competition is the way to follow here. I don’t care about the anti-acknowledgment goal and anti-announte which are filled in these policies. ”
Startups and VCs feel the urgency. The founders rush to make public through acquisition companies for special use and traditional stock exchange while the window is open. But many are still worried that road rules are rewritten in mid-voyage. The political vacuum pushes leaders to plead not only for deregulation but for intelligent and targeted legislation which supports American interests, according to Furrier.
“I think that the rebirth of technology with this race will cause an innovation generation,” he said. “Once you have succeeded, then sovereignty comes into play, communications without fronts, trade without border comes into play. You cannot have a trade without border without sovereignty.”
Look at the full podcast below to find out why these industry pros were mentioned:
David Sacks, a of the White House and Crypto Tsar
Donald Trump, 45th and 47th President of the United States of America
Tom Lee, investment director at Fundstrat Capital
Kenneth A. Goodwin Jr., MBA, CCI, CFE, Director Partner at Jeanensis
Jason Calacanis, Internet entrepreneur, co-host in All-in
Chamath Palihapitiya, CEO of Social Capital, co-host in All-in
Keith Rabois, former general partner of the Funders Fund
Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of Nvidia
JD Vance, vice-president of the United States
Joe Kernen, American news
David Butler, Director of Operations at Siliconangle Media
Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla
Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase
Dan TAPIERO, founder of DTAP CAPITAL
Bill Clinton, 42nd American president
Rob Hof, editor in chief at Siliconangle Media
Joe Biden, 46th President of the United States
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO of Pure Storage
Amit Zavery, president, CPO and COO of ServiceNow
Arvind Krishna, Chairman and CEO of IBM
Steve Mills, EVP retired in IBM
Ginni Rometty, member of the Aspen economic strategy group and former IBM CEO
Matt Garman, CEO of AWS
Andy Jassy, president and chief executive officer of Amazon
Lisa Su, president and CEO of AMD
Brian J. Baumann, founder of Nyse Wired and director of capital markets, technology at NYSE
Michael Dell, Chairman and CEO of Dell Technologies
Brad Gerstner, founder and CEO of Altimeter Capital
Marc Benioff, President and CEO of Salesforce
Lars Rasmussen, Danish computer scientist
Peter Vesterbacka, technological entrepreneur
Mårten Mickos, executive and old CEO of hackerone
Johanna Grossman, PHD, head of health care markets for health care and life sciences in Nyse
Adam Selipsky, former AWS CEO
Chase Lochmilller, CEO and co-founder of Crusoe
Here is the complete episode of Thecube Pod this week:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qmqjqizvpo
Do not miss the latest episodes of “Thecube Pod”. Join us by subscribing to our RSS feed. You can also listen to us Apple podcasts or on Spotify. And for those who prefer to look, consult our YouTube playlist. Plug now and be part of the current conversation.
Photo: Siliconangle
Support our free free content by sharing and engaging with our content and our community.
Join TheCube Old confidence network
Where technology leaders connect, share intelligence and create opportunities
11.4K +
Network of old cubes
C-level and technical
Experts in the field
Connect with 11,413+ industry leaders in our network of technological and commercial leaders forming a unique confidence network effect.
Siliconangle Media is a recognized leader in digital media innovation at the service of innovative audiences and brands, bringing together cutting -edge technology, influential content, strategic ideas and real -time public commitment. As a parent company of Silicion,, Thecube Network,, Cube research,, Cube365,, Thecube ai and Thecube Superstudios – such as those established in Silicon Valley and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) – Siliconangle Media works at the intersection of media, technology and AI. .
Founded by technological visionaries John Furrier and Vellant Dave, Siliconangle Media built a powerful ecosystem of advanced digital media brands, with a range of more than 15 million elite technology professionals. The company’s new video cloud of the company of the company is starting the interaction of the audience, taking advantage of the neural network Thecubeai.com to help technological companies make data-based decisions and stay at the forefront of industry conversations.


