# Decentralization Related Articles

HTX News Center provides the latest articles and in-depth analysis on "Decentralization", covering market trends, project updates, tech developments, and regulatory policies in the crypto industry.

Same Case, Different Verdicts: Why Was Uniswap Acquitted While Tornado Cash Was Not?

In a landmark ruling, the New York Southern District Court dismissed a class-action lawsuit against Uniswap and its founder, Hayden Adams, holding them not liable for scam tokens traded on the platform. The court, presided over by Judge Katherine Polk Failla, compared the case to holding a self-driving car developer responsible for crimes committed using the vehicle, emphasizing that open-source developers should not bear responsibility for misuse by third parties. This decision contrasts sharply with the legal outcome for Tornado Cash developers. Despite the same judge being involved, Tornado Cash co-developer Roman Storm was convicted for operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business, while another developer, Alexey Pertsev, received a prison sentence in the Netherlands for money laundering. The U.S. Treasury had previously sanctioned Tornado Cash for allegedly facilitating over $7 billion in money laundering, including for North Korean hackers. The divergent rulings highlight a key regulatory stance: decentralization is permissible, but privacy tools enabling illicit activities face strict scrutiny. The author suggests that while Uniswap’s legal victory aligns with principles of developer immunity for open-source code, Tornado Cash’s case underscores that protocols knowingly aiding crime, especially at a state level, won’t be tolerated. The piece concludes by questioning if Uniswap, despite its legal win, should take more proactive steps to screen for scams to protect users, reflecting a broader responsibility within the DeFi ecosystem.

marsbit03/03 11:10

Same Case, Different Verdicts: Why Was Uniswap Acquitted While Tornado Cash Was Not?

marsbit03/03 11:10

Who Controls Computing Power, Implicitly Controls the Future of AI: Anastasia, Co-founder of Gonka Protocol

Who Controls Compute, Controls AI's Future: Gonka Protocol Co-Founder Anastasia The centralization of compute power, not just AI models, is the critical power node in AI's future, argues Anastasia Matveeva, co-founder of Gonka Protocol. While public debate focuses on models, true power lies in the underlying infrastructure—access to GPUs, power, and data center capacity. This centralization creates structural barriers to innovation, enforces a rent-extraction model, and introduces systemic fragility. Gonka is a permissionless global network designed to decentralize AI compute. It enables anyone to contribute or access GPU resources via a programmatic, open API. Key to its efficiency is an architecture that minimizes overhead, ensuring most compute is used for actual AI workloads (primarily inference) rather than network maintenance. Rewards and governance are tied to verified compute contribution, not capital stake. The protocol addresses scalability and accessibility by allowing participants of all sizes to join without permission, with influence proportional to their compute power. It supports the emerging AI agent economy with transparent, dynamic pricing and reliable, verifiable computation. While currently not optimized for strict data sovereignty, its decentralized design avoids data accumulation, and its governance allows for future evolution to meet regulatory demands. The urgency for such decentralized solutions is high to prevent a calcified AI future dominated by a few infrastructure gatekeepers.

marsbit03/03 07:58

Who Controls Computing Power, Implicitly Controls the Future of AI: Anastasia, Co-founder of Gonka Protocol

marsbit03/03 07:58

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