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Grade: Marcus Williams

Cryptocurrency regulation - Semester

Pattern Analysis

Trajectory
Responsive
Evidence Sources
External
7
Personal
0
Entry Behavior
Reversals
0
Static
1
Self-Q
0
Summary

8 entries that engage with evidence and show some development. Student responds to new information but rarely challenges their own position directly. 0 reversals noted, 0 self-challenges.

All entries after the first reference prior entries.

Trajectory Map

Click any entry to expand. Green = references prior entry.

1
Feb 14

Cryptocurrency should be regulated to protect consumers. The lack of oversight has led to scams, fraud, and billions ...

2
Feb 28 refs prior changed

After reading about the FTX collapse, I'm even more convinced that regulation is needed. However, I can see that some...

3
Mar 14 refs prior changed

Read a compelling libertarian argument against crypto regulation. The core point: traditional finance is already regu...

4
Mar 28 refs prior changed

Interesting development: El Salvador's Bitcoin experiment shows what happens with minimal regulation. Some citizens b...

5
Apr 11 refs prior changed

Japan's approach is interesting - they classify crypto as property and require exchange registration. After the Mt. G...

6
Apr 25 refs prior changed

Considered DeFi protocols which are inherently resistant to regulation because they're decentralised. You can regulat...

7
May 9 refs prior changed

Research into stablecoin regulation revealed that Tether's reserve claims were misleading for years. This is exactly ...

8
May 23 refs prior changed

Final position: cryptocurrency regulation should follow a tiered approach based on centralisation. Centralised entiti...

8 entries 7 reference prior 7 note changes ~0 potential reversals

Position Journal

8 entries written. 7 reference prior entries. 7 include "what changed" annotations.

Predictions

10 predictions logged. 9 checked. 9 include reflections.

Consequences

1 consequences logged. 1 verified.

Origination

Gap

There's no single resource comparing cryptocurrency regulatory approaches across countries in a way that's accessible to non-experts. Academic papers are too technical and news articles focus on individual countries.

Artifact

Regulatory comparison matrix covering 10 countries (US, EU, UK, Japan, Singapore, Australia, NZ, El Salvador, China, India) across 6 dimensions: legal classification, exchange licensing, tax treatment, DeFi stance, stablecoin rules, and enforcement approach. Includes a 'regulatory friendliness' score for each country.

Composite Score

Sum of all four components (max 12). Scores update on save.