> Like, how would you even spin this as a good change?
I'm not American, why would I want American laws to apply to me? How could you possibly spin that as a negative change?
> but that doesn't change the fact that these laws exist basically everywhere
So you're saying that there is a Maltese law (or whatever jurisdiction Binance actually is right now) that is saying Maltese companies cannot do business dealings with anyone from Iran? That's the important part, not whatever the US laws says.
There are AML and sanction laws everywhere, yes. However the US sanctions are mostly enforced by not letting the offending banks transact in dollars, which are basically controlled by the US government. Because the US dollar is the world reserve currency, this normally causes banks to comply with this legislation and sanction lists.
Yes yes, we understand you, if you want to participate in the USD, you follow US embargoes, you have repeated this without actually answering any questions like 5+ times in this submission now, I think most of us understand the point you're trying to make when you keep repeating it.
They don't exists in every country, the question then becomes do they exist wherever Binance is actually headquartered?
So why all the raving about US this and US that if no one, including you, even know where they are based? Do you not feel like that's relevant when discussing US embargoes?
I'm not American, why would I want American laws to apply to me? How could you possibly spin that as a negative change?
> but that doesn't change the fact that these laws exist basically everywhere
So you're saying that there is a Maltese law (or whatever jurisdiction Binance actually is right now) that is saying Maltese companies cannot do business dealings with anyone from Iran? That's the important part, not whatever the US laws says.