UNI Burn Proposal Vote, Lighter TGE Outlook, What's the Topic of Conversation in the Global Crypto Community Today?
Publication Date: December 19, 2025
Author: BlockBeats Editorial Team
Over the past 24 hours, the crypto market has unfolded along multiple dimensions. The mainstream discussion has focused on the issuance pace and buyback strategy of the Perp DEX project, ongoing debates surrounding the timing expectations of Lighter's TGE and whether Hyperliquid's buyback is squeezing long-term development. In terms of ecosystem development, the Solana ecosystem has seen a real-world implementation attempt of DePIN, while Ethereum is advancing DEX fee structure changes and AI protocol layer upgrades simultaneously. Stablecoins and high-performance infrastructure are accelerating their integration with traditional finance.
I. Mainstream Topics
1. UNI Burn Proposal Enters Final Vote: Governance Alignment or Narrative Repair?
Uniswap founder Hayden Adams' "Unification" proposal has entered the final governance voting stage, with voting set to commence on the evening of December 19 and run until December 25.
The proposal plans to burn 1 billion UNI tokens, while simultaneously activating the v2, v3 mainnet fee switch (and Unichain fees), and through the Wyoming DUNA legal structure, aims for a clearer alignment of Uniswap Labs with protocol governance at a legal level.
Controversy within the international community is not focused on "whether to burn," but rather points to a change in the nature of governance itself: some voices question whether this is a carefully designed "governance optics" move, arguing that Labs is reasserting dominance over the agenda at a critical juncture, weakening the DAO's independence; supporters emphasize its potential for MEV internalization and fee redistribution, seeing it as a necessary step for Uniswap to move towards a sustainable token economy.
Others take a more cautious view, pointing out that Uniswap Labs has already captured a significant amount of economic value, in contrast to protocols like Aave gradually redirecting income back to the DAO, suggesting a rational assessment of this governance adjustment under such a "historical burden." Overall, the proposal is seen as a significant milestone in Uniswap's economic model transition, but it also once again exposes the ongoing blurring of boundaries between Labs and DAO in the top DeFi projects.
2. LIDO Valuation Debate Intensifies: Governance Token Paradox of High TVL and Low Market Cap
As Ethereum's largest staking liquidity protocol, Lido currently holds roughly a 25% market share, with a TVL exceeding $260 billion, annualized revenue of around $75 million, a treasury size of approximately $170 million, but its governance token LDO's market cap has fallen below $500 million, sparking widespread community questioning.
The discussion is centered around a central issue: whether a governance token still has a reasonable valuation basis in the absence of dividends and the inability to directly capture cash flow.
Some opinions bluntly state that LDO's intrinsic value is close to zero, believing that there is almost no direct correlation between protocol revenue and token holders; others attribute the continuous price weakening to the decreasing ETH staking APR, intensified staking competition, and the anticipated future market share decline.
A more radical analogy describes Lido as the "Linux of the crypto world," high in utility but lacking value capture. From a multi-faceted perspective, the only repeatedly mentioned variable is the buyback mechanism possibly launching in Q1 2026 and the structural changes related to an ETH ETF after the v3 upgrade.
In the overall debate, Lido's TVL-to-market cap ratio has reached approximately 52:1, once again highlighting the long-term misalignment of DeFi governance tokens between "infrastructure status" and "value capture ability."
3. CZ Retweet on Privacy Transfers Discussion: On-Chain Transparency, Becoming a Payment Hurdle?
Binance's former CEO CZ retweeted Ignas's post on the privacy issue of crypto payments, pointing out that current on-chain transfers fully expose transaction history. In the short term, users can only temporarily avoid tracking through centralized exchanges, but this is clearly not a long-term solution. The retweet quickly sparked a discussion, shifting rapidly from "is privacy important" to "whether viable tools already exist," evolving into a centralized showcase of privacy solutions.
Many projects and supporters took the opportunity to recommend various solutions, including Railgun, Zcash, ZK-based stablecoin solutions, UTXO-based chains, emphasizing low cost or native privacy advantages. Some users, starting from their daily payment experience, jokingly pointed out that in the current transparent ledger structure, buying a cup of coffee with cryptocurrency is almost equivalent to publicly disclosing their entire financial status.
CZ's retweet further amplified the volume of discussion, spreading this topic from the technical circle to a broader audience of users involved in transactions and payments. Overall, this discussion once again highlights the increasingly evident tension between completely transparent on-chain design and real-world payment scenarios.
4. Validation Node Performance Debate: Data or Narrative?
The debate over Ethereum's execution clients' performance has continued to intensify over the past day. The new client Tempo claims to be the "fastest execution client," but community test data shows that its performance is only about one-tenth of Nethermind's, leading to widespread questioning of its advertising authenticity.
The discussion quickly expanded from a single project to a more general question: in the node and Layer2 ecosystem, should performance representation be based primarily on marketing narratives, or must it be strictly based on reproducible data.
Some developers emphasize that public benchmark testing and real-world operational environments should be the criteria for judgment, opposing vague or selective data disclosure. Some also took the opportunity to discuss Ethereum client diversity, pointing out the trade-offs in performance, stability, and maintenance cost among different languages and implementation paths.
Overall, this debate reflects that validators and the infrastructure community's patience with the "performance myth" is waning, and the market is gradually demanding a shift back to verifiable engineering discussions.
II. Mainstream Ecosystem Dynamics
1. Solana: Energy Company with $3 Billion Annual Recurring Revenue Enters DePIN
Energy company Fuse Energy announced the completion of a $70 million Series B funding round, led by Lowercarbon and Balderton, valuing the company at $50 billion. Its disclosed Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) has reached $3 billion. Fuse stated that it would accelerate the marketization of new technologies through the DePIN model while enhancing its operational efficiency.
In related discussions, some views suggest that this case signifies that large enterprises with mature cash flows are starting to systematically adopt DePIN, kickstarting a supply-side flywheel through token incentives, reducing payment and geographical frictions, and compressing expansion costs. This may have spill-over impacts on the crypto industry in the next few years. Some community members question how DePIN specifically enhances business practicality, believing that its effectiveness still needs validation through actual execution. Overall, this event is seen as another signal of the Solana ecosystem attracting real business participants in the DePIN direction, reinforcing the imagination space where energy and crypto infrastructure converge.
2. Ethereum: DEX Fee Landscape Changes Alongside AI Protocol Layer Upgrade
In the DEX field, the latest data shows that Curve's share of Ethereum DEX fee revenue has significantly increased, approaching or even temporarily surpassing Uniswap. Community discussions point out that Uniswap's fee share has noticeably declined compared to last year, while Curve has rapidly rebounded from its previous low levels, seen by some as a representative case of DeFi fee structure recovery in 2025. There are also reminders that veCRV holders' actual returns have not improved in sync, and there is still a structural mismatch between governance tokens and protocol income.
Meanwhile, the ERC-8004 (Trustless Agents) protocol is set to launch on the Ethereum mainnet on January 16th. The proposal was introduced in August 2025 with the aim of providing a decentralized trust layer for autonomous AI agents, enabling them to carry out discovery, selection, and interaction without the need for pre-established trust. It is seen as a key protocol for building an open "agent economy." ERC-8004 was jointly authored by MetaMask, the Ethereum Foundation, Google, and Coinbase members, and has been actively promoted by the newly formed dAI team at the Ethereum Foundation. It has attracted participation from over 150 projects, with a community of over 1,000 people, making it one of the most discussed proposals on the Ethereum Magicians forum.
Some in the community believe that the protocol signals Ethereum's attempt to become the settlement and coordination backbone for AI agents. However, the balance between user experience, security, and decentralization is still subject to real-world feedback once the mainnet is operational.
3. Perp DEX: TGE Expected Divergence and Buyback Policy Controversy
Lighter TGE Timing Shift: Market Expectations Intensify Divergence
According to data shared by zoomerfied on Polymarket, the market predicts a 35% probability that Lighter will not conduct a TGE in 2025, with December 29, 2025, considered the current most likely launch date. The relevant charts show that this probability has been steadily increasing since the interim low point on December 15th, reaching 35% on December 18th, while also noting some degree of retracement.
This prediction has sparked debate within the community, with some questioning the validity and interpretive value of the information itself, while others believe that there is a lack of immediate motivation for a TGE within the year in the current market environment, making a delay to early 2026 more reasonable. Others have pointed out that the end of December falls within a holiday window, with limited market attention, making it difficult to generate significant momentum even with a token launch. Overall, the discussions surrounding the timing of Lighter's launch demonstrate significant uncertainty, reflecting the market's ongoing oscillation between project pace and risk appetite for the Perp DEX.
Hype Ecosystem New Project Perpetuals: Continuous Expansion of the Perpetual Contract Track
Perpetuals, a new Perp project launched in the Hyperliquid (Hype) ecosystem, has made its official debut, focusing on decentralized perpetual contract trading and emphasizing design innovations in leverage mechanisms and liquidity incentives. Despite limited disclosure details, the community generally sees it as an extension of Hype's existing derivatives landscape and potentially forming a competitive relationship with projects like Lighter.
Some discussions suggest that in the future, this project may synergize with the points system or cross-chain mechanism within the Hype ecosystem, thereby driving user migration and transaction activity. Overall, the emergence of Perpetuals is seen as a signal of the continuous expansion of the Hype ecosystem, further intensifying the product and mechanism competition within the Perp DEX race.
Buyback or Investment in Growth? Structural Debate Sparked by Hype's Buyback Strategy
There is a noticeable community split surrounding the ongoing $HYPE buyback strategy by Hyperliquid.
Some viewpoints point out that Hyperliquid has allocated around $1 billion for token buybacks, but with limited long-term price impact. They believe that these funds should be more directed towards compliance development and building competitive barriers to address potential future pressure from traditional financial institutions like Coinbase, Robinhood, and Nasdaq entering the perpetual contract market. They also warn that buybacks may become a structural risk source after 2026.
In contrast, other voices argue that in the current cycle, buybacks are one of the few structurally supportive measures with certainty. They not only help stabilize token expectations but also build anti-decline barriers by directly feeding platform cash flow back into the token. Some opinions also suggest that buybacks do not necessarily exclude investment in growth, as the key lies in balancing fund allocation. The overall debate reflects the ongoing balance of DeFi projects between "price stabilization through buyback" and "long-term expansion." It also highlights the strategic dilemma that Perp DEX projects face as TradFi competitive pressure gradually approaches.
4. Others
At the infrastructure level, MegaETH has announced that its Frontier mainnet is officially open to developers and projects.
The network has been online for several weeks, initially focusing on testing with infrastructure teams such as LayerZero, EigenDA, Chainlink, RedStone, Alchemy, and Safe, and is now starting to support broader stress testing and unlocking the first batch of real-time applications. According to related information, MegaETH has adopted a relatively transparent testing and observation approach, integrating block explorers, data analysis tools such as Blockscout, Dune, and Growthepie, and introducing community visualization solutions like MiniBlocksIO and Swishi.
In community discussions, some interpret this as a critical stage "shifting from trial operation to real-world load," while others emphasize that the ability of high-performance chains to deliver on promises still depends on whether oracles and data infrastructure can keep pace. Overall, this opening is seen as a significant milestone for MegaETH's transition from the testing phase to production environment, with the goal of supporting more demanding cryptographic applications that require extreme performance.
In the stablecoin space, SoFi Bank has announced the launch of a fully backed stablecoin called SoFiUSD, becoming the first nationally chartered retail bank to issue a stablecoin on a public permissionless blockchain.
In its official statement, SoFiUSD is positioned as a stablecoin infrastructure for banks, fintech, and enterprise platforms, currently mainly used for internal settlements, with plans to gradually open it up to all SoFi users.
The community discussion has focused on both its product-market fit and liquidity challenges on one hand, and the significance at the infrastructure level on the other hand: leveraging the Galileo processing engine to revamp fintech settlement processes, enabling 24/7 instant settlements, reducing pre-funding and reconciliation costs, and earning interest through investing in U.S. Treasuries. This development is seen as a sign of further integration between the traditional banking system and blockchain, highlighting the accelerated adoption of regulation-friendly stablecoins.
Meanwhile, Visa has revealed that the annualized transaction volume of its stablecoin settlement pilot has reached $3.5 billion, with the related business moving from the concept testing phase to observable market signals.
Visa has also announced two initiatives: first, launching a global stablecoin consulting service through Visa Consulting & Analytics to assist financial institutions in evaluating market fit and implementation paths; second, supporting U.S. issuers and acquirers to achieve 24/7 settlement via Circle's ref="/wiki/article/usd-coin-usdc-269">USDC on the Visa network, with Cross River Bank and Lead Bank being the first to go live, and more institutions planning to join by 2026. Community discussions have centered around the impact of this model on programmable fund management and liquidity efficiency, overall seen as a significant step in traditional payment giants accelerating blockchain integration.
Additionally, PayPal's stablecoins PYUSD and USDAI have announced a partnership aimed at enhancing interoperability and overall liquidity between stablecoins.
The information focuses on potential collaboration between the two parties in areas such as cross-chain transfers, liquidity pool integration, or payment scenario integration. The general community interpretation is that such collaborations help reduce the friction costs of stablecoins across different ecosystems and drive their joint use in DeFi and the payment system, reflecting the transition of the stablecoin race from a single-point competition to a more alliance-oriented evolutionary stage.
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