In Brief
 
- California’s state legislature has passed a bill that could require cryptocurrency service providers to register before operating in the state.
 - The bill was passed by the upper and lower houses of the state legislature on subsequent days, and is awaiting passage or a veto from Governor Gavin Newsom.
 - Meanwhile, cryptocurrency advocates have expressed concern over the bill, feeling it would impose a burden on crypto companies similar to New York state.
 -  promo Top Crypto Exchanges Without KYC Read Now
  
  
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   A bill potentially requiring cryptocurrency service providers to register before operating has been passed by the both houses of the California State Legislature.
 The Digital Financial Assets Law was passed by the California State Senate earlier this week, which was followed by its approval in the California State Assembly the next day. 
 At this stage, the bill will head to California Governor Gavin Newsom, who must either pass it into law or veto it by the end of this month.
 Bill details
 If passed, Assembly Bill No. 2269 would amend California’s financial code, bringing digital assets under its purview from Jan 2025. Anyone engaging in “digital financial asset business activity” would have to become properly licensed with the state’s Department of Financial Protection and Innovation before they could legally operate there.
 The bill largely defines a “digital financial asset” as a “digital representation of value that is used as a medium of exchange, unit of account, or store of value, and that is not legal tender, whether or not denominated in legal tender.”
 Democratic Assembly member Timothy Grayson introduced the legislation in Feb this year. Upon the bill’s passage within his own chamber, Grayson said in a statement that, “the Legislature’s understanding that a healthy cryptocurrency market can only exist if simple guardrails are established.”
 Blockchain association
 However, cryptocurrency industry advocates have spoken out against the proposed legislation. Prior to its passage in both houses, the Blockchain Association, a crypto lobbying group, urged assembly members to reject the bill. Instead, the group suggested that legislators engage with the process laid out in a recent executive order from Governor Newsom. 
 According to its announcement, the bill “creates shortsighted and unhelpful restrictions that would impede crypto innovators’ ability to operate and push many out of the state.” The association said that it would also prevent most stablecoin issuers from operating in California, which it argues deprives the state of “significant economic activity” and “countless jobs.”
 According to the Blockchain Association, the bill would introduce “the same type of onerous licensing and reporting regime that has stunted the growth of the crypto industry and limited access to safe and reliable crypto products and services in New York.”
 New York legislation
 In New York state, businesses providing cryptocurrency services are required to apply for a “BitLicense.” The first of these licenses was first issued in 2015. Other local crypto advocates, including New York City Mayor Eric Adams, have also made their dissatisfaction with the legislation clear.
 Earlier this summer, the upper house of New York’s state legislature, the Senate, passed a bill banning new Bitcoin mining permits for a period of two years. 
 The bill had been passed by the state’s lower house, the Assembly, the month before. According to the bill’s website, it is still awaiting passage from New York Governor Kathy Hochul.
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  Nicholas Pongratz
 
  Nick is a data scientist who teaches economics and communication in Budapest, Hungary, where he received a BA in Political Science and Economics and an MSc in Business Analytics from CEU. He has been writing about cryptocurrency and blockchain technology since 2018, and is intrigued by its potential economic and political usage.
 
 
 
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