Uniswap Outwits Fraudulent Fools in Legal Farce!

Ah, mesdames et messieurs, behold the grand spectacle of justice! After four long years, a federal judge declared that Uniswap, this noble platform of decentralized finance, shall not be blamed for the shenanigans of scoundrels who dared to misuse its open-stage. A triumph! Not merely for Uniswap, but for all who cherish liberty in their financial dealings-or at least the illusion thereof.

The Case That Kept Coming Back

Behold the plaintiffs, a troupe of investors led by Nessa Risley, who, in April 2022, stormed into court like a drunken troupe of actors. They accused Uniswap, its founder Hayden Adams, and certain venture capitalists of enabling rug pulls and pump-and-dump schemes-claims as flimsy as a paper crown in a rainstorm. Their efforts were as futile as a court jester’s attempt to serenade a stone wall.

Uniswap prevails, setting precedent: Scammers, not open-source devs, are the villains.

TLDR:
Open-source code is a tool, not a crime. Scammers, not developers, wear the dunce cap.

Wisdom reigns!

– Hayden Adams (@haydenzadams) March 2, 2026

Lawsuit Junked

Their first lawsuit? A farce! Thrown out in August 2023, and again on appeal. Undeterred, our plucky plaintiffs returned, reshaping their claims like a baker trying to revive stale dough. Alas, their second attempt met the same fate as a squirrel in a wheel-spinning endlessly, nowhere.

Manhattan’s Judge Katherine Polk Failla, with the grace of a feline and the wit of a poet, dismissed the case with prejudice. The plaintiffs may now only return to court as a ghost-haunting no one. The judge declared they had failed to prove Uniswap knew of the fraud, or worse, helped it along. A clever distinction, indeed, as if to say, “A stage is not a co-conspirator simply because a rogue performs there.”

Judge Failla compared the situation to a bank unknowingly processing a money launderer’s transactions or a messaging app hosting a drug dealer’s love letters. In both cases, the platform is blameless! The true villain is the one misusing the tool, not the tool itself. A lesson as old as time-or at least as old as the internet.

Open-Source Code Is Not A Crime

Hayden Adams, Uniswap’s founder, took to X to declare this outcome “good and sensible,” as if commenting on a particularly agreeable weather forecast. He argued that open-source code, like a hammer, is innocent until a fool uses it to smash windows. This was Uniswap’s central defense: they built a stage, not a den of thieves.

Uniswap, you see, is no traditional exchange. Tokens are listed without permission, a testament to its decentralized charm-or chaos. The plaintiffs, in their panic, claimed this openness bred danger. The judge, however, saw through their theatrics, declaring that offering services with dual purposes (lawful and otherwise) does not make a platform liable for the mischief of others. A truth as self-evident as the moon’s glow in the night sky.

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2026-03-04 06:12