Gino Matos
Reporter • CryptoSlate
Gino Matos is a law school graduate and a seasoned journalist with six years of experience in the crypto industry. His expertise primarily focuses on the Brazilian blockchain ecosystem and developments in decentralized finance (DeFi).
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</div><p>A federal judge in New York dismissed fraud claims against Uniswap for the second time this month, and the decision carries implications far beyond the cryptocurrency industry.</p><p>At stake: whether platforms that provide neutral infrastructure can be held liable when bad actors exploit those tools to commit fraud.</p><p>Judge Katherine Polk Failla’s ruling applies a principle that translates cleanly across technology sectors: you don’t sue the New York Stock Exchange for selling you fraudulent stock.</p><p>The same logic, she argues, applies to decentralized exchange protocols.</p><p>However, as scams proliferate across digital platforms, courts are being forced to decide who should serve as the <img fetchpriority=” data-src=”https://cryptoslate.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/bank-presale.webp” decoding=”async” height=”344″ high=”” src=”data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20xmlns=%22http://www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%201326%20344%22%3E%3C/svg%3E” width=”1326″>.
The question is whether digital infrastructure deserves the same treatment or whether internet-scale fraud creates policy problems that require internet-scale solutions.
Plaintiffs’ lawyers will almost certainly appeal. If the Second Circuit affirms, the precedent hardens. Interface developers, wallet providers, and middleware infrastructure gain a clearer safe harbor.
Investment flows toward permissionless systems with reduced tail risk.
If the Circuit reverses or if legislators decide victims need solvent defendants regardless of what tort law says, the compliance burden shifts. Platforms adopt know-your-transaction regimes. Costs rise. Innovation migrates to jurisdictions with more predictable rules.
Who decides what happens next
The immediate procedural reality is that federal civil appeals must generally be filed within 30 days of the entry of judgment.
That creates a near-term catalyst for whether this becomes binding law or returns for another round of litigation.
The larger policy question extends beyond any single case. Failla explicitly flagged this in her original opinion: if lawmakers want different rules about anonymity and platform liability in financial markets, that’s a legislative decision.
Courts apply existing standards, while Congress writes new ones.
The current standard, knowledge plus substantial assistance, sets a high bar for plaintiffs seeking to relabel infrastructure as a perpetrator. It protects toolmakers who build neutral systems that enable both legitimate commerce and fraud. It forces victims to pursue actual wrongdoers rather than convenient corporate defendants.
Whether that standard remains adequate as scams industrialize and professionalize is the question Failla declined to answer.
Federal judges interpret the law as written. If the law should change because fraud has scaled beyond what existing liability frameworks anticipated, that’s a call for elected officials who write statutes, not appointed judges who apply them.
The decision matters because it determines who bears internet-scale fraud losses in an era when those losses are measured in billions annually.
Scammers vanish. Victims demand recovery. Platforms provide the most visible target. Courts now repeatedly say that visibility doesn’t equal liability, but the economic pressure to find someone who pays doesn’t disappear just because judges draw clear lines.
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Context
Current positioning around Regulation & Policy remains sensitive to primary-source updates, policy interpretation, and execution risk across major venues.
What To Watch
Key confirmation signals now include court filings, regulator statements, and any updated compliance guidance from the involved parties.
Market participants will monitor whether legal outcomes change exchange operations, token access, or disclosure standards in major jurisdictions.
Related: More from Regulation & Policy | BOJ Examines Tokenized Central Bank Money for Digital Yen in 2026 | Selig Clears Perpetual Futures Path with CFTC in Crypto Regulation






