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Since 2010, the development of Bitcoin in Vietnam has been tumultuous. From early accusations of fraud and money laundering risks to the official promulgation of the Digital Industry Law and Resolution No. 5, cryptocurrencies have finally entered the stage of mainstream recognition. What does this shift mean? Let's look at the legal logic behind it.
**Two Stages of the Regulatory Framework**
From a legal perspective, Vietnam's attitude towards cryptocurrencies has undergone a significant transformation—from prevention and control to guidance.
The initial approach was straightforward: technological research + risk management. The main concern of regulators was to prevent financial risks and to adopt a cautious attitude towards virtual assets. But the trend has changed in the past two years. The current approach is to establish a comprehensive regulatory framework, design rules for "virtual assets" and "virtual asset service providers" (VA/VASP), create sandbox mechanisms, and promote asset legalization.
This approach is not unfamiliar—similar routes have been taken by South Korea's VASP/Travel Rule framework, Singapore's Payment Services Act and Anti-Money Laundering Act, and the European Union's Financial Intelligence Center Act. The core idea is the same: not unconditional deregulation, but management through normalization.
**Key Milestones Review**
August 21, 2017, is an important date. The Vietnamese Prime Minister issued Decision No. 1255, approving the project to improve the legal framework for virtual assets, electronic money, and virtual currency management. This marked the beginning of policymakers taking this field seriously. Since then, subsequent legal adjustments have been moving in one direction—to gradually transition cryptocurrencies from the gray area into a regulated track.