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Tech Consumer Journal > News > The SEC Just Quietly Surrendered in Its Biggest Crypto Battle
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The SEC Just Quietly Surrendered in Its Biggest Crypto Battle

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Last updated: August 9, 2025 11:02 pm
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The crypto world’s biggest and most consequential legal war is finally over. Ripple Labs, a fintech giant, has just closed the book on its nearly five-year battle with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, ending a fight that had become a proxy for the future of cryptocurrency regulation in America.

The surprise settlement is being hailed as a landmark victory for the crypto industry and a significant blow to the SEC’s controversial “regulation by enforcement” strategy.

The “SEC announces joint stipulation to dismiss appeals, resolving civil enforcement action against Ripple and two of its executives,” the regulator said in a statement on July 7.

What Was the Fight About?

Ripple is a company that uses its cryptocurrency, XRP, to make international money transfers faster and cheaper than traditional banking systems. In 2020, the SEC sued Ripple, alleging that XRP was an unregistered security. In simple terms, a security is an investment contract, like a share of stock. If a crypto token is deemed a security, it must follow the same strict registration and disclosure rules, a standard most crypto projects have not met. An SEC victory could have effectively outlawed XRP in the U.S. and set a precedent to cripple hundreds of other tokens.

On August 7, the fight officially ended. The SEC announced a “joint stipulation to dismiss appeals, resolving civil enforcement action against Ripple,” while Ripple agreed to drop its cross-appeal. The final judgment from the lower court—including a $125 million penalty—will remain in effect, but the war is over.

While Ripple is paying a penalty—$50 million—, the company is walking away with a far more valuable prize: a game-changing legal precedent. A 2023 ruling from Judge Analisa Torres dealt the SEC a major blow by finding that Ripple’s sales of XRP on public exchanges—where buyers are anonymous and not dealing directly with the company—did not qualify as securities transactions. That part of the decision remains intact.

This is a huge deal. It creates a crucial distinction that other crypto projects can now use in their own legal battles, potentially shielding them from the SEC’s claim of blanket authority over the market. By choosing to settle rather than risk having this ruling upheld by a higher court, the SEC has shown the limits of its “regulation by enforcement” playbook: its strategy of creating rules through individual lawsuits instead of issuing clear guidelines for the industry.

As Ripple’s chief legal officer, Stuart Alderoty, wrote on X, it’s “the end… and now back to business.”

Following the Commission’s vote today, the SEC and Ripple formally filed directly with the Second Circuit to dismiss their appeals.

The end…and now back to business. https://t.co/nVqthNcFOt

— Stuart Alderoty (@s_alderoty) August 7, 2025

What It Means for Main Street

While both sides can claim partial victories, the biggest winner is arguably Main Street, or the everyday investors and developers who have been caught in the regulatory chaos for years. The brutal legal battle forced a court to confirm that not all digital assets are automatically securities, especially when traded by the public. This provides a clearer, though still incomplete, set of rules. For investors, it reduces the risk that their holdings could be declared illegal overnight. For innovators, it provides a slightly clearer path to building compliant projects in the U.S., moving the industry one step closer to mainstream legitimacy.

Our Take

The SEC has spent years trying to define the crypto industry through litigation. The Ripple case shows that strategy is losing steam. The agency’s decision to settle rather than risk another courtroom loss could embolden other crypto companies to fight back rather than agree to quick deals. This marks the start of a new chapter in the crypto-Washington standoff, one where legal and political pressure may finally be forcing a long-overdue rethink of how America regulates digital assets.



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