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#Gate广场四月发帖挑战
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission made a landmark decision on April 13, 2026, one that the DeFi industry had been waiting for since the earliest days of decentralized finance. The SEC's Division of Trading and Markets issued an official staff statement clarifying the conditions under which certain crypto software interfaces can legally operate without registering as broker-dealers. This is not a minor administrative update. It is a fundamental shift in how the United States regulates the front-end layer of decentralized finance, and its consequences are already rippling through every corner of the crypto ecosystem.
For years, DeFi protocols and the interfaces built on top of them operated under a cloud of regulatory ambiguity. The fear was consistent and well-founded: if a platform helped users execute trades, matched orders, or facilitated transactions involving crypto asset securities, it might fall under the definition of a "broker" or "dealer" as defined by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. That would mean full broker-dealer registration, compliance infrastructure, reporting obligations, net capital requirements, and the kind of operational overhead that is fundamentally incompatible with permissionless, open-source finance. Many teams chose to operate offshore, remain anonymous, or simply avoid the U.S. market entirely rather than confront that regulatory uncertainty.
The April 13, 2026 guidance changes this calculus significantly. The SEC has defined a specific category called "Covered User Interfaces," which includes websites, mobile applications, and browser extensions that help users prepare and broadcast crypto transactions. Crucially, the commission has laid out a precise set of conditions under which these interfaces do not need to register as brokers. These conditions include: the interface cannot provide personalized trading advice to users, cannot control or take custody of user funds at any point in the transaction process, and cannot direct or incentivize users toward specific transactions for compensation beyond a fixed or percentage-based transaction fee that is disclosed transparently.
Under this framework, a DeFi front-end can legally present users with market data, asset prices, routing options for trades, and estimated gas fees without triggering broker registration requirements. The interface can take a transaction fee, as long as that fee is clearly disclosed and not structured as a commission that creates an incentive to push users toward specific assets or counterparties. The platform must remain passive in the sense that it facilitates user-directed actions rather than exercising discretion or judgment over what the user should do with their capital.
This is a major victory for the principle that software infrastructure should not be treated as a financial intermediary simply because it helps users interact with a blockchain. The SEC's reasoning acknowledges a fundamental truth about how DeFi works: the smart contract is the counterparty, the blockchain is the settlement layer, and the interface is merely a translation tool that converts human-readable instructions into machine-executable code. Treating the interface as a broker was always a category error, and the new guidance corrects that error with explicit regulatory clarity.
The guidance is effective immediately as of April 13, 2026, and the five-year framework gives DeFi builders a stable runway to develop compliant products in the U.S. market. Traditional broker-dealers also benefit from related clarifications that have been rolling out since May 2025, which allowed them to custody and trade crypto assets within a single entity, removing a key barrier to institutional participation in digital asset markets.
For U.S.-based DeFi teams that have been operating in legal gray zones or avoiding the American market entirely, this guidance opens a clear pathway to legitimacy. The conditions are strict but manageable: no custody, no discretion, no personalized advice, transparent fee disclosure. Teams that meet these conditions can now serve U.S. users, raise capital from U.S. investors, and operate without the existential threat of SEC enforcement action for failing to register as a broker-dealer. The era of DeFi operating entirely outside the U.S. regulatory perimeter may be drawing to a close, but not because regulators crushed it. Because they finally drew lines that DeFi can actually live within.
The broader significance of this guidance extends beyond just front-end interfaces. The SEC's willingness to issue clear, technology-specific guidance signals a more collaborative regulatory posture toward the crypto industry under the current commission leadership. Combined with the token taxonomy guidance issued in March 2026 and the staking receipt clarifications that recognized certain staking activities as outside the scope of securities law, the SEC is systematically working through the major ambiguities that have hung over the crypto industry for years. The DeFi ecosystem should take this as an invitation to engage seriously with U.S. regulators rather than continuing to treat regulatory compliance as incompatible with decentralization. The two are not mutually exclusive, and the SEC has now made that point explicitly.
#CreatorCarvinal
#SECDeFiNoBrokerNeeded
#GateSquareAprilPostingChallenge
Deadline: April 15th
Details: https://www.gate.com/announcements/article/50520