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    Aave Arc may be close to onboarding its first “whitelister” – a possible step towards institutional users integrating with the decentralized lending platform.

    In a proposal on Aave’s decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) governance forum on Monday morning, user “salmanblocks” called for adding Fireblocks as the first whitelister on the compliant implementation of Aave. Rob Salman the head of business development for Fireblocks, submitted the proposal on behalf of the company, a spokesperson told CoinDesk.

    “Fireblocks’ R&D, compliance, and legal teams have developed a new whitelister framework for permissioned DeFi. This framework meets both enterprise-grade requirements for accessing DeFi and adheres to Aave Arc’s whitelister governance criteria,” salmanblocks wrote.

    Read more: Aave, Fireblocks and Galaxy Explore Next Steps Toward Permissioned DeFi

    Aave Arc is an implementation of the Aave V2 code designed to allow institutions to enforce regulatory compliance. Whitelisters would ensure that users of these permissioned lending pools comply with relevant laws depending on the jurisdiction of the user. Here to date, the permissionless nature of DeFi, where lenders do not know who they’re lending to, has been a key blocker for corporate legal teams.

    In a statement to CoinDesk, Aave founder Stani Kulchov said that this initial proposal could be the first in a string of potential whitelistings.

    “Fireblocks aims to be the first whitelister and would add new whitelisters as well over period of time,” he wrote in an interview on Telegram. “Whitelister can be anyone that fulfils similar compliance requirements that Fireblocks initiated the market with.”

    The majority of the proposal breaks down Fireblocks’ regulatory bona fides, noting that the company “is a registered ‘money services business’ in good standing with FinCEN,” that they are “subject to KYC/KYB principles that are in accordance with FATF guidelines,” and that they have “a robust AML/CFT compliance program.”

    New products

    The proposal also noted the significant possible benefits adding Fireblocks as a whitelister could bring to the Aave community.

    For one, bringing on Fireblocks as a whitelister could aid in “the creation of sustainable governance practices for Aave Arc whitelisters and whitelister customers.”

    Major firms participating in DAOs have led to notably mixed results. Perhaps the highest profile instance is Adreessen Horowitz, which is working to open-source their governance delegation model following a pair of contentious governance votes.

    Read more: A16z Details Its New Approach to Crypto Governance

    Approving Fireblocks could also lead to integrations enabling new products, “such as the onboarding of regulated fiat on/off ramps and protocol deployments connected to debit cards, high yield savings accounts and other innovative fintech products.”

    Kulechov said that he would not be voting on the proposal, a personal policy in Aave’s governance “even when as interesting a proposal as it is.”

    “All in one, it’s a big step forward for getting a new demograhic into DeFi and would definitely make DeFi more accessible to more risk-averse users,” Kulechov wrote.

    The proposal has been viewed 55 times at the time of writing. If the proposal proves to be “non-contentious,” then it will move to a formal voting period per an explanatory post on the forums.

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