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    Home » The Future Awaits: Embracing DePIN
    Economy and markets

    The Future Awaits: Embracing DePIN

    wsjcryptoBy wsjcrypto29 Luglio 2025Nessun commento4 Mins Read
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    Viewpoint by: Aaron Basi, product lead at IoTeX

    With the recent approval of the GENIUS Act, the United States has made a significant advance towards national crypto regulation. This legislation centers on stablecoins, establishing rules for reserves, audits, and authorized issuers. This marks a key moment for the sector. If legislators aim to foster the next wave of advancements, they must not stop at this point. 

    One of the most rapidly expanding areas, decentralized physical infrastructure networks, or DePINs, still lacks a legislative framework .

    DePIN transcends speculation or NFTs. It focuses on constructing real-world infrastructure via community-owned hardware. Individuals contribute antennas, sensors, or hard drives and earn token rewards. These networks support services such as wireless connectivity, mapping, and decentralized storage. 

    In contrast to numerous blockchain applications, DePIN is already in operation and escalating rapidly.

    DePIN is advancing quicker than regulation

    Initiatives like Glow have exceeded $15 million in revenue, while Geodnet reports an annual recurring revenue exceeding $1 million. DePIN protocols throughout the ecosystem collectively generate more than $250 million in revenue. These are not experiments; they are operational networks providing value to users and contributors.

    However, they still lack regulatory clarity. Unlike stablecoins, which are now governed by specified federal regulations, DePIN projects operate in a nebulous area. This ambiguity exposes users, developers, and investors to risk.

    Regulatory deficiencies are becoming increasingly apparent

    DePIN systems depend on tangible data and infrastructure. They do not neatly fall into the telecom, cloud computing, or crypto categories. This complicates the application of existing laws.

    Many DePIN protocols rely on devices that collect and share environmental or location-specific data. There are no distinct standards regarding what data can be gathered, how it should be stored, or who possesses it. Without this clarity, users may lose confidence and opt-out.

    Compensation remains another unresolved concern. Individuals are incurring out-of-pocket expenses to deploy hardware, yet there are no established guidelines on how they should be compensated. If incentives diminish or tokenomics alter, contributors are left bearing risk without protections.

    Related: Blockchain and AI could catalyze a $3.5T DePIN market boom by 2028: WEF

    Governance poses its own difficulties. Many DePIN projects assert decentralization, yet key decisions remain concentrated among core teams. If these systems are to serve public interests, they must be transparent and accountable.

    DePIN merits thoughtful regulation

    The GENIUS Act demonstrated that crypto regulation does not need to be punitive. It establishes a foundation for stablecoins while fostering innovation. DePIN warrants a similarly discerning approach.

    DePIN is distinct from financial tokens. It occupies the intersection of hardware, software, and services. This hybrid nature necessitates a customized framework. It should not be classified alongside decentralized finance (DeFi) or stablecoins.