December 30, 2025
Crypto: Some Basics for Corporate Boards
Foley & Lardner’s Patrick Daugherty recently shared his article “10 FAQ About Crypto for Corporate Directors” with us. This resource covers a lot of the basics about digital assets and serves as a good starting point for helping you to educate private and public company directors about crypto. This excerpt addresses the differences between the traditional financial system and decentralized finance typically associated with crypto assets:
Traditional finance (sometimes called “TradFi”) differs from decentralized finance (“DeFi”) with respect to control. TradFi is controlled by banks and governments. DeFi is controlled by code. US dollar deposits, stocks and bonds are traditionally custodied in and by banks, broker-dealers and clearing agencies and are bought, transferred and sold using exchanges and those other TradFi institutions. The assets are controlled by centralized entities and identifiable human beings. Most crypto assets, in contrast, can be held and transferred without an intermediary. They can be transferred using personal computers and the internet from one person’s “wallet” to another’s wallet.
Metamask and Ledger are two well-known wallet providers. This is “peer-to-peer” transfer. That said, there are centralized crypto exchanges, such as Coinbase and Crypto.com, that can be used to transfer and custody crypto assets. And there are decentralized exchanges, such as Uniswap, where crypto assets are bought and sold peer-to-peer, with no human involvement other than the buyer and the seller. The Cube Exchange is a hybrid exchange, combining centralized ordermatching with decentralized custody and settlement.
Topics addressed in the FAQs include, among others, “what is crypto?” “Is crypto lawful?” “What do Miners do? What is Proof of Work? Proof of Stake?” “What are ‘utility tokens’?” and “What is a ‘stablecoin,’ and how does it compare to crypto assets like BTC and ETH?”
– John Jenkins
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