I just saw a very important news story in the DeFi world. A federal judge in New York dismissed all remaining claims in the class action lawsuit against Uniswap Labs and Hayden Adams. This means the case, which lasted nearly 4 years, is over.



The story in brief: In 2022, investors claimed they lost money on 38 fraudulent tokens on the Uniswap platform. They said the company facilitated these operations by providing the infrastructure. But Judge Catherine Polk Failla rejected this claim outright.

The key point in the ruling: lack of actual knowledge. The court said Uniswap did not have direct knowledge of the specific scams. Merely receiving complaints after the losses occurred does not prove prior awareness. And general warnings on social media are not enough.

The court also rejected the idea that providing a platform alone amounts to “material assistance” in the fraud. It compared this to traditional exchanges—providing market access means responsibility for those who use them.

As for the other claims: the court found no misleading data from Uniswap itself. The terms of service and posts clearly warned users about fraudulent tokens. And regarding ill-gotten gains, there was no evidence that Uniswap directly profited from these transactions during the relevant period.

Hayden Adams wrote on X: “If you write open-source code and scammers use it, the responsible parties are the scammers, not the code developers.” And Brian Nistler, Uniswap’s general counsel, said this is another ruling that sets an important legal precedent for DeFi.

What you need to understand: the ruling is very clear—designing decentralized infrastructure itself does not amount to regulating fraud. The court emphasized that concerns about regulatory gaps in DeFi should be addressed by Congress, not through broad judicial interpretation.

This means stronger legal protection for developers of open-source protocols. After several rounds of amendments and reviews, it looks like the legal path ends here. Investors do not have a strong legal basis to pursue further action, and the ruling sets a clear standard for protecting innovation in decentralized systems.
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