UMA Restricts Polymarket Resolution Proposals to Whitelisted Addresses

Generated by AI AgentCoin World
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 7:45 am ET1min read
Aime RobotAime Summary

- UMA, Polymarket's oracle provider, restricted resolution proposals to whitelisted addresses via the MOOV2 upgrade, formalized by the August 6 UMIP-189 governance proposal.

- The change centralizes resolution functions among experienced proposers with 95%+ accuracy, aiming to reduce disputes in non-contentious markets like sports and crypto price predictions.

- While critics argue it undermines decentralization, UMA emphasizes the temporary whitelist (initially 37 addresses) will expand as the ecosystem evolves, with current Polygon mainnet testing underway.

UMA, the decentralized

provider for Polymarket, has updated its system to restrict the submission of resolution proposals to only whitelisted addresses [1]. This change is part of a transition from the Optimistic Oracle V2 (OOV2) to the Managed Optimistic Oracle V2 (MOOV2), which was formalized through the passing of the UMIP-189 governance proposal on August 6 [2]. The update aims to enhance the quality of market resolutions by limiting the number of users who can submit proposals directly, thereby reducing disputes and delays [3].

Under the MOOV2 contract, only a curated set of users—determined by their experience and historical accuracy in submitting proposals—can submit resolution data to Polymarket [1]. While the broader community can still tag these approved proposers to act on their behalf, the core resolution function is now centralized among a smaller, more reliable group. This shift is intended to prevent manipulation and early proposal disputes, particularly in non-contentious markets like sports, weather, and cryptocurrency price predictions [2].

PolymarketGuide, an independent knowledge base, noted that the previous system often resulted in low-quality or premature proposals, leading to prolonged delays and bond losses [3]. The guide described the transition as a shift from “open debates over precedent to a centralized council of proposers,” highlighting the move’s potential to streamline the resolution process and improve overall market reliability [3]. Additionally, UMA’s community manager confirmed that the new contract is now supported on its Oracle Dapp and that Polymarket is currently testing the system on the Polygon mainnet with real rewards before a full deployment [1].

Risk Labs, the company behind

, initially compiled a whitelist of 37 addresses for the MOOV2 launch, including employees of both UMA and Polymarket, as well as users with a track record of over 20 proposals and more than 95% accuracy [2]. While the timeline for MOOV2’s full activation on Polymarket remains unclear, the move is widely viewed as a step toward reducing manipulation and enhancing the platform’s trustworthiness [1].

The update reflects UMA’s broader strategy to refine its oracle infrastructure and improve the performance of Polymarket as a decentralized prediction market. However, some observers have raised concerns that the shift toward a whitelisted system may reduce the platform’s decentralization and community-driven nature [1]. UMA has responded by emphasizing that the current list is not permanent and that it plans to review and expand it as the ecosystem evolves [2].

Sources:

[1] AInvest, [https://www.ainvest.com/news/uma-restricts-resolution-proposals-whitelisted-entities-polymarket-2508/](https://www.ainvest.com/news/uma-restricts-resolution-proposals-whitelisted-entities-polymarket-2508/)

[2] The, [https://www.cryptotimes.io/2025/08/12/uma-limits-polymarket-resolutions-to-whitelisted-parties-only/](https://www.cryptotimes.io/2025/08/12/uma-limits-polymarket-resolutions-to-whitelisted-parties-only/)

[3] The, [https://www.theblock.co/post/366507/polymarket-uma-oracle-update](https://www.theblock.co/post/366507/polymarket-uma-oracle-update)