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Cryptocurrency News Articles

Centralized exchanges (CEXs) must shift from an allowlist model to a blocklist model

Mar 22, 2025 at 11:00 pm

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice.

Centralized exchanges (CEXs) must shift from an allowlist model to a blocklist model

Centralized exchanges (CEXs) have long controlled what people can trade. If a token wasn’t listed on major exchanges, it didn’t exist for most users. That system worked when crypto was small. But today? It’s completely broken.

The rise of Solana-based memecoins, the popularization of projects like Pump.fun and developments in AI-driven token creation are driving the creation of millions of new tokens each month.

Exchanges have not evolved to keep up. That must change. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong recently weighed in on the topic, saying that exchanges must shift from an allowlist model to a blocklist model, where everything is tradeable unless flagged as a scam.

In many ways, this is the Kodak moment for CEXs. Kodak’s failure to adapt to digital photography has made it a poster child of failed strategy. Now, exchanges are faced with the same threat. The old way of doing things isn’t just slow — it’s obsolete. The real question is: What comes next?

The old model is holding exchanges back

CEXs were initially built to make crypto feel safe and familiar. They modeled their approach after traditional stock markets — carefully vetting every token before it could be listed. This system was designed to protect users and keep regulators happy. Crypto, however, does not function like the stock market.

Unlike stocks, which require months of filings and approvals before going public, anyone can create a token instantly. Exchanges simply can’t keep up. The recent launch of the TRUMP coin is a great example. It launched on Jan. 17 and immediately skyrocketed in value, but by the time it had been listed on significant CEXs, it was already past its peak.

Recent: Bybit hack a setback for institutional staking adoption: Everstake exec

For exchanges, this isn’t just an efficiency problem — it’s a fight for survival. The rules they were built on don’t fit crypto’s reality anymore. To compete, they must reinvent themselves before the market leaves them behind.

CEXs shouldn’t fight DEXs

Instead of fighting to preserve outdated listing processes, exchanges should embrace the open access of DEXs while retaining the best parts of centralized trading. Users simply want to trade, regardless of whether an asset is officially “listed.” The most successful exchanges will remove the need for listings altogether. Listing tokens faster is not enough when the future is an open-access model.

This new generation of exchanges won’t just list tokens — they’ll index them in real-time. Every token created onchain will be automatically recognized, with exchanges sourcing liquidity and price feeds directly from decentralized exchanges (DEXs). Instead of waiting for manual approvals, users will have access to any asset the moment it exists.

Access alone isn’t enough — trading has to be seamless. Future exchanges will integrate onchain execution and embedded self-custody wallets, enabling users to purchase tokens just as easily as they do today. Features like magic spend will enable exchanges to fund self-custodial accounts on demand, converting fiat into the required onchain currency, routing trades through the best available liquidity and securing assets without users needing to manage private keys or interact with multiple platforms.

Nothing will change from the user’s perspective — but everything will be different. A trader will simply click “buy,” and the exchange will handle everything in the background. They won’t know if the token was ever “listed” in the traditional sense — they wouldn’लगभगत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रजवत्रत्रज.

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