The known DEXs today have their developers and owners named in public, so what makes the government will have to implement if they want something to do with them? I guess that the possibility is there but that depends on what really cracking down means to them. I think it's mostly about regulating them instead of cracking down especially the established ones and they can't ignore volume and profit which translates as tax to them.
Being named in public won't be a problem if they designed their protocol around decentralized governance structure, everything will need to go through consensus but unfortunately some project don't do that.
But the high quality project ones does and being named means nothing.
The government can still chase and demand the developers to change something within it, I remember in the past that there were some dex which have been semi-centralized. Although I can't remember the name.
The known DEXs today have their developers and owners named in public, so what makes the government will have to implement if they want something to do with them? I guess that the possibility is there but that depends on what really cracking down means to them. I think it's mostly about regulating them instead of cracking down especially the established ones and they can't ignore volume and profit which translates as tax to them.
I agree with that point of view. There will be no crackdown, instead they will introduce regulations and require DEX to comply.
Crypto industry has entered a new chapter and is gradually being recognized. It is no longer in a stage of doubt or being treated as a fringe sector. So, future government policies will lean toward regulation rather than trying to eliminate it.
Moreover, you are right. They are reaping huge benefits from it, and that is the tax. They wouldnt be foolish enough to undermine their own interests.
There's only one thing that they're trying to take and crack down, and that's the privacy coins and as well as mixers. So for as long as they won't be into that two categories for which they are not, they should be fine if ever the regulators would want them to comply.