
Unchained Why Crypto Market Structure May Not Pass Until 2027: DEX in the City - Ep. 946
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Nov 13, 2025 The hosts dive into the evolving landscape of decentralized finance (DeFi) and what 'programmable risk management' could mean for its future. They discuss how the recent Balancer hack exposed crucial differences in project responses to exploits. The myth of 'pure DeFi' is put under the microscope, questioning its viability. Additionally, insights from the MIT Brothers trial reveal legal boundaries in the crypto space, while the long-awaited crypto market structure bill is analyzed, with predictions pushing its passing to 2027.
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Decentralization Is A Spectrum
- Decentralization isn't binary; chains and projects vary in how much they intervene after exploits.
- Different networks choose different remedies, revealing trade-offs between immutability and user protection.
The Balancer Exploit And Mixed Chain Responses
- Balancer lost $128 million after an exploit that manipulated pool pricing and drained funds.
- Some chains paused or reversed actions while Ethereum largely stuck to 'code as law', producing mixed responses.
Give Users Choice In Risk Profiles
- Let users choose the level of safety or risk they want by building opt-in protections into protocols.
- Offer defaults and options so institutions and individuals can pick conservative or high-risk UX paths.
