Four days after Uniswap Labs and the Uniswap Foundation proposed merging their operations and activating the long-awaited fee switch, a X spat between the protocol’s founder and Gary Gensler’s former chief of staff reopened wounds that the crypto industry thought had healed.
The exchange wasn’t just about a governance vote, it was a proxy war for how Washington and Web3 remember 2022, and whether decentralization was ever more than regulatory theater.
Amanda Fischer, now at Better Markets after serving as SEC chief of staff under Gensler, fired first.
On Nov. 14, she posted that Uniswap’s proposal of consolidating Foundation operations into the for-profit Labs entity while directing protocol fees to UNI token burns, said:
“This site is filled with posts talking about Uni’s switch to centralization because it was never a core philosophical value but a regulatory shield.”
Within hours, Hayden Adams responded:
“You tried to hand a centralized monopoly on crypto exchange in the US to FTX. I built the largest decentralized marketplace in the world. And she says decentralization isn’t one of my values? This crashout is insane lmao. Not everything you read on twitter is true Amanda.”
The ghost of SBF’s Washington playbook
Adams’s invocation of FTX wasn’t a rhetorical flourish, but a strategic excavation. In October 2022, one month before his exchange collapsed, Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF) published “Possible Digital Asset Industry Standards,” a policy framework that endorsed licensing DeFi front ends and requiring OFAC sanctions screening.
The proposal triggered immediate backlash from builders, who saw it as a surrender disguised as a compromise.
The debate crystallized in a Bankless episode, where Erik Voorhees accused SBF of “glorifying OFAC” and undermining the core values of crypto.
Bankman-Fried countered that front-end licensing would preserve permissionless code while satisfying regulators, a distinction critics found meaningless since the interfaces were how most users accessed protocols.
Simultaneously, SBF became the most prominent industry backer of the Digital Commodities Consumer Protection Act, a legislation critics labeled the “SBF bill” due to its compliance obligations that would effectively ban major DeFi services.
The bill died alongside FTX’s implosion, but the episode cemented a narrative: Bankman-Fried wanted regulatory capture favoring centralized exchanges, and Washington was willing to play along.
Fischer’s SEC tenure overlapped with this period. While she has pushed for transparent Administrative Procedure Act rulemaking, her record is unambiguously pro-enforcement.
In Congressional testimony, she argued that crypto can comply with existing securities laws. A recent analysis co-authored by Better Markets criticized the current SEC for “abandoning” its enforcement efforts.
Her philosophical alignment with vigorous regulation makes Adams’s accusation particularly charged.
The fee switch that took five years
The unification proposal represents genuine structural change. Since launching UNI in 2020, Uniswap Labs operated at arm’s length from governance, restricted in how it could participate in protocol decisions.
The fee switch remained dormant despite repeated attempts, each stalled by legal ambiguity around whether activation would transform UNI into a security.
The Nov. 10 proposal, co-authored by Adams, Foundation Executive Director Devin Walsh, and researcher Kenneth Ng, activates protocol fees across Uniswap v2 and v3 pools, directs proceeds to UNI burns, and immediately destroys 100 million UNI from the treasury.
Labs would also cease collecting its own interface fees, which have generated a cumulative total of $137 million.
The merger folds Foundation operations into Labs, creating “one aligned team” for protocol development. Critics see centralization as a drawback, as fewer entities mean fewer checks.
Supporters view efficiency as a benefit, as fewer entities mean faster execution. UNI surged up to 50% on the news before settling at $7.06 as of press time.
Fischer’s reading is that decentralization was always contingent, maintained when it provided legal insulation and abandoned when economic incentives shifted.
Adams’s read is that the move represents maturation, where a protocol that survived five years of regulatory hostility can finally align value creation with governance.
What 2022 actually looked like
The Tornado Cash sanctions in August 2022 shaped the context both parties reference. When Treasury’s OFAC sanctioned the mixer protocol, it marked the first time code itself faced designation.
The action forced every DeFi builder to confront whether American users could legally interact with their protocols and whether front ends bore liability.
SBF’s policy note dropped two months later in that exact atmosphere. His framework acknowledged the new reality: if regulators could sanction protocols, the fight over access became existential.
His answer, which involved licensing the interfaces, screening users, and keeping code permissionless, struck many as capitulation to the very chokepoint model crypto was designed to circumvent.
The alternative position, championed by builders like Voorhees and implicitly by Adams, held that any compromise on access controls recreated TradFi’s gatekeeping in Web3 clothing.
If you screen users at the front end, you’ve already lost the permissionless game.
Uniswap’s position mattered because of its scale. As the largest decentralized exchange, now processing over $150 billion monthly and generating nearly $3 billion in annualized fees, its compliance posture sets industry defaults.
Why this matters now
The current SEC has retreated from crypto enforcement under the new administration. Fischer’s Better Markets analysis explicitly faults this pullback.
For enforcement advocates, Uniswap’s unification is a victory slipping away after regulatory capture has succeeded.
For Adams and the DeFi community, the proposal represents earned autonomy after surviving years of hostile oversight that nearly classified UNI as a security, creating such profound legal uncertainty that the fee switch remained dormant despite token holders’ wishes.
The FTX reference cuts deepest because it reframes the question of who was cooperating with whom. If SBF’s Washington agenda aligned with SEC preferences, then enforcement-minded regulators were enablers of centralization, not protectors against it.
Adams built permissionless infrastructure; Bankman-Fried lobbied for licensed chokepoints. One has survived regulatory scrutiny and now activates value sharing for token holders. The other collapsed into fraud.
Their X exchange crystallized three years of tension into a single question: was DeFi’s decentralization real, or was it always contingent on regulatory convenience?
The $800 million token burn and 79% governance approval odds suggest the market has already chosen its answer.

