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Venom Foundation Calls for Stronger DeFi Protections in New Comprehensive Guide

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Venom Foundation has published a new guide focused on a problem that has dogged decentralized finance since its earliest boom years: retail users often enter DeFi chasing higher yields and easier access, but they are also the most exposed when things go wrong. The Abu Dhabi-based blockchain firm says the guide is meant to offer a practical, layered approach to investor protection without abandoning the open, permissionless structure that makes DeFi attractive in the first place.

Venom describes itself as a Layer 0/Layer 1 blockchain built for Web3 applications, with dynamic sharding, more than 100,000 transactions per second, and average fees below $0.0002 on its official site. The company’s timing is unsurprising. DeFi has moved from a niche corner of crypto into a mainstream on-ramp for users who want borderless financial tools, but the sector’s growth has also been accompanied by some expensive lessons.

Smart contract failures, unstable token designs, poor collateral management, and opaque risk structures have repeatedly wiped out user funds. Venom’s new guide argues that retail participants bear a disproportionate share of those losses because they usually do not have the technical depth or risk teams that professional traders and institutions can rely on.

That argument sits neatly alongside Venom’s broader mission statement, which says the network aims to serve as infrastructure for a global ecosystem of Web3 applications. Christopher Louis Tsu, chief executive of Venom Foundation, framed the issue as an industry turning point, saying, “sustainable growth requires proactive security measures that reduce unnecessary risks without introducing central control or stifling innovation.”

In other words, Venom is pitching a middle path: stronger safeguards, but not the kind that turn DeFi into a permissioned system in disguise. That theme runs through the company’s broader technical stack as well. Venom’s website highlights account abstraction, external messaging, and arbitrary workchains, all of which are positioned as tools for building more flexible blockchain applications.

Multi-Layer Framework for Investor Safety

At the center of the guide is a four-part protection framework. First, Venom calls for stricter smart contract security standards, including mandatory third-party audits for protocols that want ecosystem grants, official listings, or prominent placement in the Venom DeFi hub. The company says its own code verification tools and ongoing monitoring systems are meant to complement those audits by catching vulnerabilities earlier in the development cycle.

Second, it proposes decentralized insurance and risk-sharing pools, where community-governed modules could offer opt-in coverage against exploits and smart contract failures while staying non-custodial and funded through protocol fees and staking incentives. The message is straightforward: users should have more protection, but the protection should still live on-chain and be governed transparently.

The third pillar is dynamic risk management. Venom’s guide recommends intelligent leverage limits, collateral requirements, and position health monitors that adjust in real time as markets become more volatile or liquidity conditions deteriorate. That kind of system is designed to reduce cascading liquidations, one of the most common ways smaller users get hurt when markets move violently.

The fourth layer is transparency. Venom wants standardized on-chain reserve proofs, real-time risk dashboards, and regular verifiable reporting for stablecoins, liquidity pools, and major lending protocols so that users do not have to make decisions in the dark. In the company’s view, more visible data is not a cosmetic upgrade; it is part of the safety system itself.

Stronger DeFi Protections

The guide also places heavy emphasis on implementation without coercion. According to Venom, projects would still be able to deploy freely and permissionlessly on the network, but those seeking ecosystem incentives, liquidity programs, or more visibility would be encouraged to meet higher standards.

Governance would remain community-led through on-chain voting, which the company presents as a way to avoid unilateral control by any single entity. That structure reflects Venom’s broader design philosophy. Its official materials describe the network as a low-cost, scalable blockchain with non-custodial wallets, staking, interchain transactions, liquidity tools, and an NFT marketplace already embedded in the ecosystem.

Venom says the guide was shaped by a review of major failures across the DeFi and crypto landscape, including the Terra/Luna and UST collapse, the FTX insolvency, and various smart contract exploits. The common thread, according to the company, is that too many users were asked to trust systems that looked decentralized on the surface but still contained hidden centralization, weak collateralization, or off-chain dependencies that were not obvious to ordinary investors.

Those lessons are now feeding into Venom’s recommendations around diversified collateral models, better oracle design, verifiable transparency, and circuit breakers that can slow damage before it spreads through an ecosystem. The foundation is not just talking about the issue in theory. It says the recommendations are already being folded into parts of its native DeFi stack, including ChainConnect, the Web3.World DEX, and upcoming workchains.

Venom also continues to position itself as a high-throughput network for more demanding use cases, and the foundation said it achieved 150,000 transactions per second in a closed-network stress test. That claim, paired with Venom’s own emphasis on deterministic finality and Byzantine Fault Tolerance in its broader technical materials, helps explain why the company believes safety features can be built into infrastructure rather than bolted on later.

For Venom , the new guide is as much a statement about the future of DeFi as it is a product roadmap. The company is betting that retail adoption will only become durable if users feel protected from the kinds of failures that have defined crypto’s roughest cycles. Its answer is not to strip away DeFi’s openness, but to harden the environment around it with audits, insurance, real-time risk controls, and more transparent reporting. Whether the wider industry follows that path remains to be seen, but Venom is making a clear case that the next phase of DeFi will be judged not only by yields and speed, but by how well it protects the people using it.

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