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Uniswap’s Adams: Citadel ‘Weaponizing’ SEC to Classify DeFi Devs as Broker-Dealers

source-logo  coinedition.com 17 h
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The cold war between decentralized finance (DeFi) and Wall Street incumbents turned hot Tuesday, with Uniswap Labs founder Hayden Adams accusing Citadel Securities of engineering a regulatory kill-switch for the industry. Adams alleges the market-making giant is pressuring the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to legally reclassify software developers as “centralized intermediaries,” a designation that would impose impossible compliance burdens on permissionless protocols.

Adams’ remarks, published on social media, claim that Citadel is pushing the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to classify software creators of decentralized protocols as if they operated traditional institutions, a shift he argues would reshape how DeFi teams are treated under federal rules.

Related: Polygon’s Big ZK Gamble Is Starting to Show Real DeFi Numbers Through Katana

Adams Points to Regulatory Pressure and “Fair Access” Dispute

Adams referenced what he described as Citadel’s long-running efforts to shape policy, asserting that the firm has been lobbying behind closed doors for years. He also linked the current dispute to his view of previous tensions involving ConstitutionDAO, suggesting Griffin had opposed the project in the past.

First Ken Griffin screwed over Constitution DAO

Now he's coming for DeFi, asking the SEC to treat software developers of decentralized protocols like centralized intermediaries

Bet Citadel has been lobbying behind closed doors on this for years

Okay thats all pretty bad, but… pic.twitter.com/ExoNhbhadu

— Hayden Adams 🦄 (@haydenzadams) December 4, 2025


A central point of contention involves Citadel’s claim that DeFi protocols cannot provide “fair access,” a position Adams publicly criticized. He said the argument was striking given Citadel’s role in traditional market-making, adding that open-source systems lower barriers to liquidity creation in ways that differ from conventional trading environments.

Community Members Highlight Fragmented DeFi Landscape

Following Adams’ post, developers and community figures weighed in on what they described as broader structural issues complicating today’s policy discussion. Developer Armani Ferrante said the debate is often undermined by the absence of a clear definition of DeFi, noting that platforms range from fully decentralized exchanges to centralized entities that present themselves as decentralized.

You're holding yourself to Uniswap standards which most don't live by.

The problem is that "DeFi" is not well defined and so all of these conversations are an apples to oranges comparisons. There's CEXs. Unregulated CEXs. DEXs. And unregulated CEXs pretending to be DEXs.…

— Armani Ferrante (@armaniferrante) December 4, 2025

He argued that some systems enable unequal market access and rely on trust rather than verifiable mechanisms, suggesting that policymakers and users should evaluate whether a protocol withstands extreme scenarios involving high-frequency trading actors.

BlockTempo added that Uniswap’s internal standards differ from many other projects. The outlet noted that DeFi remains active because users in jurisdictions not favored by the United States can still interact with decentralized platforms.

SEC Enforcement Trend Forms the Backdrop

The exchange unfolded as the SEC continues to enforce securities laws against DeFi teams. In September 2024, the regulator settled charges with Rari Capital and its co-founders, alleging they misled investors and operated as unregistered brokers.

The SEC stated that it evaluates economic realities over decentralization labels and will hold individuals accountable when violations occur.

Related:Risk Curator Protocols TVL Nears $10B as Investors Adopt Risk-Managed DeFi

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