According to a report by Golden Finance, and as disclosed by Forbes reporter Eleanor Terrett, page 49 of the House's new market structure discussion draft aims to clarify that transactions involving the sale of digital goods do not constitute securities as long as they do not involve the buyer obtaining ownership rights to the issuer's business, profits, or assets. In other words, if you trade digital goods on the secondary market instead of purchasing directly from the issuer, then unless that sale grants you some form of ownership or a claim to the company's profits or assets, it will not automatically trigger U.S. securities laws.