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Smart Contracts

Uniswap lawsuit narrows liability for open DeFi platforms

Last updated: March 3, 2026 7:40 pm
Published: 2 months ago
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A long-running court battle over the uniswap lawsuit has ended in New York, closing a key test of liability for open crypto trading protocols.

A federal judge has dismissed the remaining state law claims against Uniswap Labs and its founder Hayden Adams, ending a four-year class action over scam tokens traded on the protocol. Judge Katherine Polk Failla issued the ruling on Monday in Manhattan federal court, dismissing the second amended complaint with prejudice, which means the plaintiffs cannot refile the case.

The plaintiffs sought to hold the decentralized exchange responsible for losses tied to rug pulls and pump and dump schemes. They argued that the Uniswap protocol enabled fraudulent token issuers to reach investors at scale. However, the court found those arguments insufficient under state consumer protection laws and concluded that the pleadings did not meet the required legal standard.

Judge Failla held that the plaintiffs failed to plausibly allege that Uniswap had knowledge of specific fraudulent activity. Moreover, she found no evidence that the company substantially assisted any deceptive scheme. The ruling reinforces the distinction between operating an open protocol and actively participating in misconduct.

The case, led by class representative Nessa Risley, began in April 2022 and initially included federal securities law claims. In August 2023, Judge Failla dismissed those federal claims, a decision later upheld by the Second Circuit on appeal. The appellate court then remanded the remaining state law claims for further review, and Monday’s ruling resolves that final portion of the dispute.

In her opinion, Judge Failla stressed that creating an open trading platform does not automatically amount to assisting fraud. She noted that the plaintiffs did not plausibly allege actual knowledge of any particular deceptive conduct. Additionally, the court found no basis for unjust enrichment, concluding that the services Uniswap provided were ordinary infrastructure that can be used for lawful purposes.

Moreover, the court underscored that providing neutral tools to the market does not, by itself, create liability. That said, the decision leaves open the possibility that different facts in a future case could support claims where a platform more directly engages in or promotes specific fraudulent offerings.

The ruling also addressed broader questions around open source development and responsibility for smart contracts. The court reaffirmed that drafting and publishing smart contract code does not make developers legally responsible for third party misuse, absent concrete allegations of direct involvement. It found no facts suggesting that Uniswap Labs directly participated in any alleged scheme involving scam tokens.

Consequently, the court concluded that liability could not attach on the claims presented. This aspect of the decision is being viewed as a significant marker for decentralized finance developers who maintain non-custodial trading infrastructure. However, the opinion also signals that courts will still scrutinize conduct where protocol operators step beyond neutral technology and into promotional activity.

The uniswap lawsuit outcome therefore offers a clearer boundary between code authorship and actionable misconduct. At the same time, it highlights ongoing tension between investor protection goals and the permissionless architecture of decentralized exchanges, where anyone can list and trade tokens without centralized vetting.

The class group had amended its complaint in May to focus on state level consumer protection violations after the federal securities claims failed. Plaintiffs alleged that Uniswap allowed fraudulent tokens to trade freely and claimed the project unjustly benefited from trading fees linked to those assets. However, the court maintained that hosting a decentralized protocol does not equate to endorsing or recommending specific tokens to users.

Judge Failla’s decision effectively rejects a broad theory of dex platform liability for third party token issuers. Moreover, it confirms that plaintiffs must show concrete knowledge and substantial assistance, not just generalized awareness that scams can occur in crypto markets. That requirement aligns with existing legal standards applied to other types of financial intermediaries.

Uniswap founder Hayden Adams publicly welcomed the outcome on social media, framing it as a validation of the protocol’s design and governance approach. Additionally, company counsel characterized the order as another important uniswap labs ruling in favor of open financial infrastructure and non-custodial exchanges.

The decision also had an immediate market dimension. Following the ruling, the UNI token rose about 6% to $3.92, moving in tandem with a broader crypto market rally. While the price action cannot be attributed solely to the legal development, traders appeared to interpret the news as reducing regulatory and litigation risk around the protocol.

For decentralized finance more broadly, the case adds to a growing body of court commentary on smart contract developer liability. However, it does not fully resolve how U.S. law will treat hybrid models where teams exert stronger control over user interfaces, token listings, or liquidity incentives. Future litigation and regulatory action will likely continue to test those boundaries.

In summary, the ruling in the class action over scam tokens confirms that, on the facts presented, Uniswap’s role as an open protocol operator did not create liability under state consumer protection law. It closes a four-year dispute while setting an influential reference point for how courts may approach decentralized exchanges and protocol governance in upcoming cases.

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