Quote from jedwards:
I'm doubtful. I really don' t think the "powers that be" really care about regulation and making the markets safer for retail. The SEC isn't around to protect retail, they're there to give the semblance that the markets are fair, which it is not. There are so many easier, bigger fish to fry, like HFT manipulation, etc, and they don't do that. The "follow my trade" markets are relatively small compared to the other problems. I sincerely doubt that regulators will do anything.
That being said, what about prop trading firms, where they call out trades for people in the middle of a massive trading room? What would be the difference between that and a live trading room? It seems like it would be a free speech issue, as long as they weren't telling people specifically to trade their trades. This is something Hoffman is good at skirting, so it seems like they might be able to avoid any problems in that regard.
Well, the bottom line is a lot of gray area and uncertainty will exist if regulators take further action. They might do that solely as a token gesture to appease myriad complaints from the follow-us and/or trade-our-money schemes.
I'm sure with enough money and legal advice, loopholes can be found or created to circumvent legislation. But for sure it will impact many or most operations and ther current mode.