in

DeFi protocol Balancer stops crypto exchange from gaming BAL

Balancer Labs developers have implemented a token whitelist after a short Discord discussion—and without using the BAL governance token.

Does a Discord chat count as DeFi?

That’s the question many industry observers are pondering after Balancer Labs held just such a vote in response to an unexpected exploit in the distribution of Balancer’s BAL governance tokens. 

Yesterday, just after DeFi protocol Balancer had begun distributing BAL, the FTX crypto exchange uncovered a way to unfairly capture well over 50% of BAL distributions. The ordeal raised questions about what’s fairand who decidesas millions of dollars locked in DeFi protocols transition to the stewardship of decentralized governance token holders.

.@FTX_Official is currently gaming $BAL distribution (on pace to receive >50% of this week’s distribution).

Balancer uses @coingecko price feed to calculate liquidity in pools. Big players can create assets & price them as they wish to inflate numbers.https://t.co/zIESmky3NO pic.twitter.com/YE7tGV0Av4

— Predictions Exchange (@PredictionsExch) June 24, 2020

Balancer, a protocol for creating pools of crypto assets and facilitating token swaps began calculating distributions for BAL governance tokens earlier in June, with actual distributions starting on Tuesday. BAL distributions are based on the proportional amount of liquidity (the value of tokens locked in a given Balancer pool) being provided by a wallet address, with values being calculated using data from CoinGecko.

Sensing opportunity, FTX exchange added the obscure USDTBEAR and USDTHEDGE tokens to CoinGecko, then added nearly $100 million in liquidity to a Balancer pool split between the two. Since the value of the liquidity locked by other Balancer liquidity providers amounts to only a few tens of millions, the massive (but essentially useless in a practical sense) FTX pool was slated to receive a huge share of BAL payouts, well more than 50% of all distributions.

It didn’t take long for the exploit to be uncovered, prompting a discussion on the Balancer Labs Discord that resulted in the addition of a whitelist for tokens that can be used to mine BAL on the platform. Such an action, however, seems to go against the very spirit of the BAL token, intended to allow holders to collectively make these types of decisions.

The community seems at least somewhat divided. Unsurprisingly, FTX founder and CEO Sam Bankman-Fried tweeted displeasure over the action, echoed by DeFi purists who see the move as an affront to the principles of decentralized protocols.

12) There were a number of really bad things about the process:

A) Voting was done on discord, not by BAL tokens. So that undermines the governance of BAL and makes it seem more like a generic person-driven decision making system to modify the project.

— SBF (@SBF_Alameda) June 24, 2020

Other users in the Balancer Discord and on Twitter lauded the developers for their quick action to halt an exploit that stopped legitimate and useful Balancer pools from securing rewards within the system as originally intended.

The drama has not been good for the price of BAL tokens, which are down about 10% compared to yesterday’s highs above $21. While there are still details to be worked out surrounding how the whitelist will operate and be administered, BAL token distributions will continue. 

Balancer is a young protocol, and lacks the support of a crypto titan like Coinbase to help facilitate a problem-free rollout, as Compound has so far enjoyed with the COMP governance token. The ongoing saga makes plain just how difficult transitions to decentralized governance can be, at a time when that trend is picking up speed and adherents every day. 

What do you think?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

Stablecoins are not driving central bank digital currency race: BIS report

$1 billion in Bitcoin options expire tomorrow. Here’s what that means