Uniswap Labs Responds to SEC Notice
Uniswap Labs, creator of the Uniswap protocol, responded publicly to Wells’ notice from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) last month. According to a blog post on Uniswap’s website, the company expressed its belief that the SEC should embrace open source technologies that improve outdated commercial and financial systems rather than filing lawsuits.
SEC’s claims
Uniswap Labs refutes the SEC’s aggressive theory of what it sees as an attempt to expand the commission’s jurisdiction beyond telecommunications technology exchanges and beyond securities to all markets. The company argues that the SEC’s legal arguments are weak and have been refuted in court.
As autonomous software, the Uniswap protocol allows users to trade directly with each other without relying on centralized intermediaries or paying fees. The protocol has supported $2 trillion in transaction volume without a single hack and has been integrated by thousands of teams. Uniswap Labs claims that the protocol provides a secure, affordable, and transparent infrastructure that is consistent with the SEC’s mission to protect investors and maintain fair, orderly, and efficient markets.
SEC’s Claims and Uniswap’s Response
The SEC claimed that the Uniswap protocol is an unregistered stock exchange managed by Uniswap Labs, that the Uniswap interface is an unregistered stock broker-dealer, and that the UNI token is an investment contract. In response, Uniswap Labs states that these assumptions stretch the definitions of exchanges, brokers, and contracts to the point of meaninglessness. The company claims that the token is a file format, such as a PDF, and the protocol is a universal computer program that anyone can use and integrate, such as TCP/IP.
Prepare for a legal fight
Despite the looming legal challenges, Uniswap Labs remains confident and ready to fight the SEC’s claims. The company’s legal team includes former SEC enforcement chief Andrew Ceresney, who represented Ripple in victories against the SEC, and former U.S. Attorney General Don Verrilli, who has argued more than 50 cases before the U.S. Supreme Court. Represented Grayscale in successful litigation against the SEC.
While the legal battle progresses, Uniswap Labs plans to continue building and improving the protocol, advocating for the right to use and distribute universal code to challenge incumbents to upgrade, adapt, and compete.
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