In a Manhattan federal courtroom in the US on Monday 2 March 2026, Judge Katherine Polk Failla handed down a decision on the Uniswap case that may come to mark a turning point for decentralised finance (DeFi).
By dismissing the long-running class action in Risley v Universal Navigation Inc. with prejudice, the court did more than close a four-year dispute. It drew a clear line between writing software and committing financial misconduct.
That distinction has hovered over crypto since its earliest days. The question was simple but existential: can developers be held legally responsible for how anonymous users deploy their code?
The court’s answer was unequivocal. No.
The plaintiffs, led by investor Nessa Risley, sought to hold Uniswap Labs and its founder, Hayden Adams, liable for losses tied to “scam tokens”, rug pulls and pump-and-dump schemes launched by third parties. Their argument rested on two claims. First, Uniswap functioned as an unregistered broker-dealer. Second, its smart contracts were effectively instruments of fraud.
In a detailed 51-page opinion, Judge Failla dismantled that theory. Holding a developer responsible for how strangers misuse a permissionless protocol, she wrote, would “defy logic”.
Her reasoning was straightforward. Providing general-purpose software is not the same as directing or knowingly assisting fraud. To impose liability, the law requires “actual knowledge” of specific wrongdoing and “substantial assistance” in carrying it out. The plaintiffs established neither.
Yet, it is important to temper the rhetoric. This is a federal district court decision, not an appellate or Supreme Court ruling. Other circuits could approach similar facts differently. Regulatory enforcement actions also operate under distinct statutory frameworks. However, the reasoning carries weight. It addresses core principles of intermediary liability and statutory seller status under the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
The court rejected the notion that developers of autonomous smart contracts “hold title” to assets traded through those contracts. Without custody, control or direct participation in transactions, the statutory seller argument collapses. In effect, the judgment recognises that decentralised infrastructure differs structurally from traditional financial intermediaries.
That may prove its most enduring contribution.
For DeFi developers, the relief is palpable. For years, teams have operated in a regulatory grey zone, uncertain whether publishing open-source code could expose them to sweeping liability. This ruling affirms a principle many in the industry have argued for: neutral infrastructure is not automatically culpable. If a scammer exploits a protocol, the scammer bears responsibility. The toolmaker does not become a fraudster by association.
This matters beyond Uniswap. Lending protocols such as Aave and Compound and liquidity platforms like Curve Finance rely on similar architectural principles.
UniswapIf courts were to equate code deployment with brokering activity, much of decentralised finance would face existential legal risk. Instead, the decision reinforces the “protocol as infrastructure” thesis – that DeFi resembles internet plumbing more than it does a bank branch.
There is, however, a sobering counterpoint.
Judge Failla acknowledged that the plaintiffs had suffered a “plainly felt injury”. The law simply did not provide a remedy against the protocol’s developers. Policy concerns, she noted, belong with Congress, not the judiciary.
For users, that means responsibility remains largely personal. There is no implied duty for protocol deployers to vet tokens. No judicially imposed screening requirement. No automatic recourse against infrastructure providers when a token implodes.
Due diligence becomes a first-order obligation. Audit reports, reputation signals, analytics tools and decentralised insurance products may fill part of the gap. But they are market responses, not legal mandates.
The decision also complicates the enforcement strategy. Agencies such as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission have often attempted to apply legacy securities frameworks to decentralised systems.
This ruling suggests that merely providing a decentralised marketplace is insufficient to establish substantial assistance in fraud.
Future cases will likely turn on questions of control. Who can upgrade contracts? Who profits directly from specific listings? Who curates front-ends? The more decentralised the architecture, the harder it becomes to assign traditional intermediary liability.
That does not end regulatory scrutiny. It raises the evidentiary threshold.
Moreover, the industry would be unwise to treat this as a blanket shield. Appellate review could refine or narrow aspects of the reasoning. Congress could craft bespoke legislation for digital assets. Regulators may pivot toward targeting identifiable control points rather than base-layer protocols.
UniswapStill, the broader signal is unmistakable. Courts are beginning to distinguish between writing code and engaging in financial misconduct.
That conceptual clarity changes the strategic landscape. It encourages builders to maintain genuinely decentralised architectures rather than drifting towards cosmetic compliance through partial centralisation. It also accelerates the search for user-side protections, curated interfaces, risk scoring systems, and insurance primitives that address vulnerabilities without undermining protocol neutrality.
Also read: Summary of Sam Altman’s AMA on OpenAI’s controversial pact with the Department of War
It may be too early to call this the Magna Carta of DeFi. That label depends on how higher courts and lawmakers respond. But the judgment has articulated something foundational: code, in itself, is not conduct. Infrastructure, absent knowledge and active participation are not fraud.
For developers, that is a green light to continue building, while it’s a wake-up call for the users, that nothing replaces due diligence.
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