A coalition of over 40 cryptocurrency firms, including major players like Coinbase, Kraken, and Binance.US, has come together to form an industry alliance aimed at enhancing transparency within the digital asset market. This initiative, named the Transparency Alliance, was launched to propose standardized token disclosures, akin to the transparency practiced in stock markets, where investors have better visibility into their purchases.
The alliance has adopted the Token Transparency Framework created by Blockworks as a guiding benchmark for evaluating various token projects. Founding members of the alliance represent some of the largest exchanges and infrastructure providers within the cryptocurrency sector, alongside custodians and market makers, ensuring a comprehensive approach to bolstering investor knowledge.
Jason Yanowitz, co-founder of Blockworks, emphasized the disparity in understanding between traditional investments and digital tokens. “When investors buy a stock, they understand what they own. When they buy a token, they do not,” he stated, highlighting the challenge investors face due to fragmented, incomplete, or inaccessible information about tokens.
Since the Token Transparency Framework was introduced in June 2025, a total of 44 protocols, including projects like Morpho, Jupiter, Spark, and dYdX, have completed the filing process. The framework necessitates two types of disclosures: a one-time submission for newly launched tokens, resembling an S-1 registration filing, and a continuously updated filing for more established protocols. These disclosures will cover critical factors such as entity structure, allocations for insiders, agreements with market makers, exchange listing terms, and buyback strategies.
Yanowitz pointed out that as cryptocurrency progresses towards institutional adoption, there is a pressing need for a unified disclosure infrastructure to facilitate significant capital inflows into token markets. Discussions surrounding the framework have also been initiated with regulatory bodies like the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), indicating a growing recognition of the importance of transparency and market integrity within the industry.
Notably, the framework is available free of charge to issuers and platforms, allowing Blockworks to monetize through data, research, and software products associated with the ecosystem. The initiative is not designed to regulate speculation; rather, it aims to ensure investors are well-informed about their purchases. Yanowitz acknowledged the continued presence of memecoins and experimental tokens within the cryptocurrency culture but affirmed that understanding the nature of these tokens is crucial for investors’ decision-making.
He clarified that the role of the alliance is not to label tokens as “good” or “bad,” but to encourage disclosures that enhance overall market transparency. Long-term success of the initiative will likely depend on whether member firms embrace and normalize these disclosures, particularly concerning aspects that have traditionally been difficult for investors to access, such as insider allocations, liquidity arrangements, and listing terms.
“The market can decide what it values, but it should not have to decide in the dark,” Yanowitz concluded, emphasizing the need for clarity in the evolving landscape of digital assets.


