A lawsuit filed against Uniswap and its venture capitalist backers was dismissed by a US district Court on August 31, 2023. The court ruled that the claims were devoid of factual support, and the platform’s decentralized structure makes it different from traditional legal proceedings involving identifiable parties.
The court also recognized that current laws are lacking in addressing these types of issues and hopes that regulations will be updated to tackle the gray areas.
How did the Lawsuit Against Uniswap Start?
Nessa Risley and five other plaintiffs individually purchased tokens using Uniswap between December 2020 and March 2022. The six investors lost money in connection to their token transactions. In April 2022, Nessa Riley filed a case against Uniswap Labs founder Hayden Adams and investors which include Paradigm and Andreessen Horowitz.
The plaintiffs argued that Uniswap is aware that its platform is being used to execute scams like rug pulls and pump-and-dump schemes. However, the defendant (Uniswap) did nothing to stop them because it stood to profit from fees. According to the plaintiffs, the defendant helped facilitate the scams by providing a marketplace for buyers and sellers, drafting smart contracts, and by owning governance tokens.
How Do DEXs like Uniswap Work?
Decentralized exchanges, like Uniswap, allow the trading of digital assets directly on the blockchain without any intermediaries or centralized authorities. DEXs use smart contracts to facilitate transactions and provide liquidity for trading pairs. A smart contract is a program that automatically executes transactions when conditions are met.
Uniswap falls under the category of automated market maker (AMM), which uses liquidity pools to determine the price of tokens. Investors who provide funds to liquidity pools earn rewards from fees collected from transactions.
Uniswap allows anyone to create a liquidity pool for any pair of ERC-20 tokens. ERC-20 tokens are assets built on top of the Ethereum (ETH) network.
The Art of DEX Scamming
Transactions in decentralized exchange can be done anonymously. Unlike centralized exchanges, like Binance and Coinbase, DEXs do not need to perform KYC (Know Your Customer). Users simply need to connect their wallets, like Metamask or Trust Wallets, to the platform if they want to buy or sell tokens. This emboldens bad actors since they know that it will be hard to prove their identities.
A rug pull is a type of scam wherein developers create a liquidity pool on a DEX like Uniswap. They invite investors to invest in their tokens by hyping them up on social media while promising high returns. However, once enough tokens have been bought by investors, the developers will abruptly withdraw all liquidity, leaving outsiders with a worthless bag of cryptocurrencies. The anonymous investors would then disappear with all the funds they have stolen.
A pump-and-dump scheme happens by price manipulation. Scammers would buy huge amounts of low-value tokens. Then these scammers would try to artificially inflate the price by creating a fake demand and spreading false information. Bot, influencers, and online groups are used to promote the token. When the price reaches a certain value, the scammer would dump all of their tokens. This would cause the price to crash, leaving late investors with a huge loss.
The Judge’s Decision on the Uniswap Case
The plaintiffs argued that not holding Uniswap accountable for their losses is akin to failing to hold “a technology company that creates self-driving cars with flaws leading to harm or death” liable for those injuries, …regardless of whether they were responsible for such flaws.” However, the court also commented that “… this is less like a manufacturing defect, and more like a suit attempting to hold an application like Venmo or Zelle liable for a drug deal that used the platform to facilitate a fund transfer”.
Judge Katherine Polk Failla’s decision demonstrates that when facts are thoroughly examined, the DEFI ecosystem and its components are just technological tools. Despite all the allegations, it is ultimately the abusers of these tools who should be accountable for crimes. Unfortunately, it is hard to catch the anonymous scammers.
DEFI tools can be compared to a knife, which could either be used to either perform productive tasks or commit injury to others. Have you ever heard of a knife maker being sued for a stabbing incident?
Source: Court Decision