I just noticed an interesting development in the New York judicial system that could seriously affect the future of decentralized finance. Federal Judge Catherine Polk Failla of the Southern District of New York issued a ruling, fully dismissing the lawsuit against Uniswap Labs and its founder. This is not just routine litigation—it is a landmark decision that protects the principle of open protocols.



The case began back in April 2022. Investors led by Nessa Risley claimed that they lost money on 38 fraudulent tokens traded through Uniswap between April 2021 and April 2022. They sought to hold the protocol developers accountable, arguing that the company facilitated the sale of unregistered securities and allowed fraud to unfold on its platform.

The court examined the issue carefully. First, in August 2023, the federal securities claims were dismissed. Then, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed that decision in February 2025. But in March 2026, Judge Failla finally closed the case, dismissing all remaining claims based on state law, with a prohibition on refiling.

So what’s the key point? The judge found that the plaintiffs failed to prove that Uniswap had actual knowledge of specific fraudulent schemes. Allegations after the losses, general warnings on social media—none of this is enough to prove complicity. In addition, the court concluded that simply providing a platform—even if fraudsters are operating on it—does not amount to participation in fraud.

This decision by the New York federal court is hugely significant. It confirms that open-source developers are not responsible for how third parties use their code. If someone writes a smart contract with open source code and scammers use it, responsibility lies with the scammers, not the developers. That’s both logical and fair.

The court also noted that regulatory gaps in decentralized finance are better addressed through Congress than through an expansive judicial interpretation. This is an important point: the legal system recognizes the limits of its own authority and signals that broader changes should be made by lawmakers.

Hayden Adams, the founder of Uniswap, commented: if you write open source code and scammers use it, responsibility lies with the scammers. Brian Nistler, General Counsel of the Uniswap Foundation, called it yet another precedent-setting decision for DeFi. The federal charges had previously been dropped, and now all state claims have been dismissed as well.

This ruling protects innovation in a space where developers do not control user behavior. It shows that courts are beginning to understand the nature of decentralized systems and are not trying to extend responsibility to protocol creators in the absence of direct involvement in wrongdoing. For DeFi, that’s a good sign—it means there is legal clarity that allows the ecosystem to grow.
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