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Let’s talk about central exchanges, or about Wall Street cosplaying the road to Web3, as I’d like to call them. These are not platforms from cryptographic origins. They are Parker’s transport and dress up while running the same old playbook.
For years, CEXS has perfected its fee collection skills. It made billions of transaction revenues but gave nothing back to users who promote their business. There are no tokens. There are no dividends. Not even a thankful meme.
Binance is currently seeing normalized (!) trading volumes of around $14.2 billion daily, with its 24-hour top exchange. Exchange’s standard fee for users under $1 million per month is 0.1%. So, if you do some quick maths, it’s about $14 million in Binance’s daily revenue.
Their business model is at first glance elegant in its simplicity. You trade and win. You lose (often) and they still win. It’s like stepping into a casino that charges you a cover fee, holding your tip when you lose, then asking you to tilt the dealer for a good vibe. The house never loses, and the player? They don’t take a seat at the table.
Enter Dex 2.0. These next-generation dispersion exchanges are not satisfied with surface-level dispersion and flashy multi-chine integration. They are doing something much more radical: reprogramming the economy of the exchange itself. Instead of building a platform where the homes always win, they are building an ecosystem where everyone wins. By distributing the revenues of the protocol directly between users and liquidity providers, the DEX 2.0 protocol transforms what was once a rent-seeking model into a community-owned value-sharing engine. This is not just an interface upgrade, it is a philosophical shift towards user empowerment.
See example
Two of the Top-10 derivatives DEXS, GMX and DYDX, currently set up powerful examples of the category.
Get GMX. The model allows Stakers and LPs to earn a portion of the protocol’s transaction fees, effectively turning passive users into revenue partners. This change in incentive has helped stakeholders not only invested in the protocol’s success, but also fostered a deep and loyal community.
Another DEX 2.0 example is DYDX, who has undergone similar hentai, moving from a basic-driven model to a completely decentralized DAO, redistributed fees and truly community-driven governance.
Meanwhile, new players like the pair are experimenting with streamlined incentive architectures designed to maximize alignment between builders, users, and liquidity providers to push boundaries even further (that’s all I can say here!).
It is not Tech Stack or Tokenomics that integrate these experiments. It’s a simple and powerful idea. Adjust the incentive and watch the flywheel turn. Value-sharing protocols become stronger. Builders attract long term users as well as regression chasers. Traders earn real yields rather than sustainable paid income, rather than speculative APR that evaporates in a week.
And liquidity providers can stop acting like mercenaries flying from farm to farm. Instead, they become co-owners and stick to the benefits of helping them create. That level of commitment cannot be purchased through bes. It needs to be built with trust and shared value.
trade off
Of course, there is no trade-off between this. Share profits at the protocol level is not as easy as turning the switch over. Clarity of regulations remains a distant dream. We cannot agree whether these revenue sharing tokens are securities, loyalty, or truly ambitious memes.
The design against Sybil Attacks is an endless cat and mouse game. KYC and compliance needs are not diminished. And every incentive system, no matter how well designed it is, is vulnerable to games, manipulation, or complete exploitation. Plus, building a sustainable flywheel takes time. It’s not enough to simply distribute tokens and hoping people will stick. You need to gain governance, test incentives, and the mechanisms need to be refined at all times.
But despite all this, the Dex 2.0 model feels more honest. It’s been more tuned. More human. Users are not only access, but a true sense of ownership of the tools they use every day as agents.
This shift is not just about flashy front-ends and tougher spread runs, so it’s a reimagining of the possibility of exchange. This is the debt version of dividend paying stock, except for this, dividends are on-chain, with the shareholders and governors.
Being a user is a world that means being a stakeholder. Your loyalty is rewarded with a tangible share of benefits rather than stolen or pure. Ownership no longer requires being insider, that is, participation.
Let’s face it: In the financial world where Tradfi is competing to tokenize all asset classes except their profit margins, CEXS is one exploit or mismanagement crisis away from becoming the next FTX.
It’s revolutionary, I know.
But perhaps, perhaps, the original promise of the code was not merely agriculture, leveraged bets, or members. Maybe it was this: replace extraction with participation. It reorganizes its power from intermediaries and those who actually create value. And in that world, in that model, everyone eats.
