Uniswap token holders have approved the creation of a Decentralized Unincorporated Nonprofit Association under Wyoming law — a "DUNA" structure designed to give DAO members legal and tax protection without diluting on-chain governance. The vote, which passed with more than 80% support and quorum well above the foundation's threshold, clears the principal legal prerequisite the Uniswap Foundation had cited as blocking any meaningful fee-switch implementation. It is also the most prominent adoption to date of a state legal structure built specifically for token-governed protocols.
DUNAs were authorized by Wyoming legislation in 2024 — the same legal regime that pioneered the LLC and the captive-insurance company forms in earlier eras — and were designed specifically to accommodate the distributed-membership reality of token-based cooperatives. The form gives DAO members defined rights and limited liability under state law, resolving a long-standing question that has chilled professional engagement with DAOs for years: can U.S. participants in a token-governed protocol be sued individually for the protocol's collective actions. The Uniswap Foundation's outside counsel had argued for more than a year that no fee switch could be activated without first resolving that question, on the grounds that diverting protocol fees to an unstructured collective could expose token holders to joint-and-several liability under existing partnership doctrines.
The Wyoming DUNA gives the Uniswap DAO most of the operational tools a traditional nonprofit would have without requiring members to sign a formal agreement. The structure can hold property, contract with vendors, file taxes as a separate entity, and — crucially — distribute or accumulate proceeds without the IRS treating each member as having received a pass-through allocation. The Uniswap implementation includes a member registry that mirrors active UNI delegate participation rather than passive token ownership, narrowing the universe of legally recognized members to those who have demonstrated consistent governance engagement. That choice was deliberate. Foundation counsel argued that limiting recognized membership to active participants both reduces legal-noise risk and aligns the DUNA's formal voice with the on-chain governance signal that already drives protocol decisions.
Reaction among DAO legal scholars was substantively positive. Aaron Wright, the lawyer who helped draft the original DUNA legislation, described the Uniswap adoption as "the validation event the structure needed to become standard." Several other major DAOs — including Aave, Compound, and ENS — have publicly indicated they are evaluating analogous structures, and at least two are believed to have begun formal Wyoming filings. Tax practitioners, who had previously raised concerns about DAO members receiving constructive distributions of protocol fees, signaled comfort with the DUNA's separate-entity treatment. Foundation board members confirmed that fee-switch implementation work would resume immediately, with a target for activation later in 2025.
More broadly, the vote crystallizes a durable answer to one of the most persistent legal questions in DeFi: how to give a protocol's governing collective enough legal personality to function while preserving the open, permissionless nature of token-based participation. The DUNA framework — and the Uniswap adoption in particular — represents the first scalable answer to that question that satisfies both crypto-native priorities and traditional regulatory expectations. It also sets a competitive baseline. Protocols without comparable structures will face increasing difficulty signing material vendor contracts, conducting fee distributions, or formally engaging with regulators. The DUNA, in other words, is becoming table stakes.
The next step is the fee-switch proposal itself. Foundation staff have signaled that implementation work — including the underlying token-jar mechanism that will eventually emerge — was already substantially complete and was waiting only on legal cover. Watchers should focus on the timing of the activation proposal, the proposed split between LP and protocol fees, and whether the DUNA's member registry meaningfully constrains who can participate in fee-related governance. Outside Uniswap, the most interesting question is which DAO follows next. Aave's contemporaneous brand-and-revenue dispute would benefit substantially from a comparable legal structure, and several delegates have privately indicated they will push for one once the more immediate political fight is resolved.