This Week in Law 278 (Transcript)
Denise
Howell: Next up on This
Week in Law, we’ve got Aaron Wright, Warren Allen, and Peter Van Valkenburgh.
And if you want to know how the Bitcoin block chain can site people, save
journalism, enable smart contracts, and yet is under attack, this is not a show
to miss. Join us.
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This is TWiL, This Week
in Law with Denise Howell, episode 278, recorded October 10, 2014.
Schroedinger’s Crypto
This episode of This Week in Law is brought to you
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sampler box, go to naturebox.com/twit. That’s naturebox.com/twit. Hi folks,
Denise Howell here. So glad that you’re joining us for this
episode of This Week in Law. Because it’s on a topic that I personally
don’t know enough about. So I’m thrilled to have the opportunity to learn from
the really brilliant folks here joining us today. I’m guessing that maybe you
guys out there, I don’t know, probably lots of you know more than I do about
the specifics and technology; possibly not quite as much about all of the
policy ramifications. All of the potential uses of the
technology behind Bitcoin. So we’re going to go deep on that today and
we’ve got a great panel of folks to do it. All of this, blame Aaron Wright for this show. See he emailed me and brought a ton of issues
that I never ever thought of before. And did not know were happening. Thought that it would be great synergy for our show. And he
was absolutely right about that. Aaron, it’s great to have you joining us
today. And thank you for lighting the fire under me to put together this show
today.
Aaron
Wright: Thanks for
having me. I’ve always been a big fan and am happy to be on.
Denise: We’re thrilled to have you. For those of you who
are not familiar with Aaron, he is the director of Cardoza Laws, tech startup
clinic. He was also the cofounder of Armed Chair GM which got bought by Wikia
at which point he became general counsel and a VP at Wikia. So Aaron, thrilled to have you. And once again, thanks so much
for getting us to go deep on Bitcoin.
Aaron: Yea, it’s going to be great.
Denise: So as soon as Aaron emailed me and we realized we
would be going deep on Bitcoin and looking at some current controversial issues
about the regulation of Bitcoin, I knew that we had to have Jerry Brito or
someone blessed by Jerry Brito. Excuse me, I always do
that to his name at least once when I say. And he put us in touch with Peter
Van Valkenburgh who is the director of research for Coin Center. Hello, Peter.
Peter
Van Valkenburgh: Hello,
Denise. And hi everyone and thank you for confirming my
blessed status from the great Brito.
Denise: Yes, you have been blessed by the great Brito.
Peter: Gary’s our executive director here at Coin Center.
We’re a really fresh organization that’s non-profit, looking out for preserving
freedom of action for innovators in the digital currency space. So happy to be here.
Denise: Wonderful to have you. And in a stroke of great
synergy, Peter is fresh off a gig speaking at the DC Legal Hackers meet-up and
we’re going to talk a bit about what Peter discussed there. But guess what, joining us is the director, the lead director of the
New York Legal Hackers organization. And that’s Warren Allen. Welcome back,
Warren.
Warren
Allen: Hi, Denise.
Thanks for having me. I should correct; I’m not really the lead director. We
have four directors, Phil Weiss, Tara McDot, and Lauren Mack. And I’m just one
of the four. But we all sort of share decision-making, powers on that and
responsibilities. But it’s a lot of fun. And we also have a number of chapters
outside New York and DC is one that we’re very proud of. They do amazing work
with McWilliams, Jameson Dempsey, and Allen Delevey. Got to
spread the love around for the legal hackers.
Denise: And you’ve been on our show, I don’t know this is
your third or fourth time now. Tell us for someone who may have missed those
previous wonderful sojourns of yours on This Week in Law, what is Legal Hackers
all about again?
Warren: So Legal Hackers is really sort of a movement
looking at bringing lawyers and coders and technology people together in the
same room, having great conversations like the same kind of thing that you do
on This Week in Law. Talking about how law doesn’t keep up with technology and
vice versa. And thinking about practical solutions about what we can do to
change that. So hopefully I think we’ll have some good legal hacking basically
happening right on the show.
Denise: Let’s do it. And we’re going to talk a lot about
the ramifications and the regulatory framework and immediate future of Bitcoin.
So let’s go there right now. Alright, Aaron when you emailed me you let me know
that there in New York where two of you are, is that right? No, at least Warren
is there.
Aaron: I’m in New York, too.
Denise: Oh, you’re in New York, too? There we go. So there is legislation already pending or at least regulatory
rumblings afoot from the Department of Financial Services in the state. About wanting to license people who are involved in the Bitcoin
infrastructure. Can you tell us, tee that up for us. What’s going on there?
Aaron: Sure. The Department of Financial Services which
is a department in New York State has proposed a bit license regulation. It’s
still a proposal. It’s a very long regulation. But basically if you are
transmitting virtual currency and it’s not really for a gaming purpose, then
you are potentially subject to this licensing scheme. And this licensing scheme
has some really interesting and potentially difficult implications for startups
and other companies that are going to be working in this space. You would have
to get finger-printed. There’s bonding requirements. There’s a lot of, pages and pages of requirements of things that you would need to comply
with in order to satisfy this regulatory scheme. The idea I think, what really
pushed this forward, is the Department of Financial Services is worried about
potentially problematic aspects of virtual currencies in terms of consumer
protection. In terms of just making sure the government has a sufficient handle
on tracking where money is going. There’s this rule called the Bank Secrecy Act
and there’s a bunch of rules, anti-money-laundering rules. And New York State
has basically tried to take a slant on those rules and package them up in a
proposal that they’re calling the bit license.
Denise: Right, so you can understand why regulators have
their eye on Bitcoin. Certainly New York is not alone. Peter, in his recent
talk at the DC Legal Hackers group, did a slide presentation and one of his
slides nicely and graphically presents some of the most likely candidates who
might be interested in regulating Bitcoin. There we go. A whole serious
collection of folks and even if just a few of those got involved it would
seriously impact the Bitcoin landscape as we know it now. Why is this such a bad thing, Aaron, that regulators are interested
in Bitcoin for a reason? It’s an unregulated currency exchange so can you at
least sort of see the regulatory concern here?
Aaron: Yes. So there’s definitely valid regulatory
concern. You’re dealing with value, people’s money. It makes sense for
regulators to want to step in and provide basic protections to make sure that
money is adequately protected. That your value is not going to get stolen in
some way. The problem or one of the potential problems that this regulation has
currently drafted, and I think it’s an open question as to whether or not it’s
going to maintain its current form, is that there’s a lot of amazing applications
for the technology underlying Bitcoin. The real part of what makes Bitcoin a
revolutionary technology is the thing called a block chain. The block chain is
really a shared database that allows people to transact and share value and
soon property and other things without the need for a centralized middleman. So
the first application that really uses this technology is Bitcoin. And that
enables people to trade money. And to exchange that, but the applications for
this vast and they’re going to expand well beyond just currency. Into digital
contracts which some people are now calling smart contracts, to digital
property, to just really eliminating the need for a middleman in a lot of
everyday websites that we use. Using a shared database, you can do things like
exchange emails without the need to send it through Gmail. Or transact a type
of transaction that you do on eBay without the need for eBay to sit in the
middle. So there’s a lot of wonderful applications for
this that are not in the financial realm that get potentially swept up by the
bit license proposal.
Peter: So, Denise that slide with all the regulators on
it, I think what we’re dealing with as far as so many different sources of
regulatory oversight, is we’ve got federalisms. There’s a lot of the law that
you actually need to worry about when it comes to money transmission. A lot of
that is state-by-state law. So instantly we’ve got 50 potential regulators
there. And that’s not a threat from evil conspiracy against new technology.
That’s just the way our current systems are set up. And sometimes our current
systems don’t work with new technologies right off the bat. And there’s going
to be a period of adjustment there as we figure out how we deal with an open
protocol that’s decentralized and crosses borders. But is
currently potentially regulated by individual states. Let alone by
individual countries across the globe. In the internet space, for defamation
law which was of course because it’s common-law, was by a state court kind of
thing. And that was hugely problematic for say a big internet company like
Google. Or a small blogger who’s in Alabama and they
suddenly drag into a court for defamation suit in Oregon. And what was a really
fortuitist turn of events in the history of internet policy was that an
interesting-sounding law: the communications decency act. Which really sounds
like it’s about censorship maybe. And originally it had some stronger oversight
in it. But ultimately, that law was a preemption in a
way of defamation law state-by-state. So you ended up having to only deal with
a federal law to worry about as far as what you’re speaking instead of
state-by-state. And this is all going to be very familiar to a bunch of
tech-quoters. But I think we’re going to see similar things happening. I’m not
saying we’re going to see a bill that preempts state laws anytime soon from
Congress, nor necessarily would we want to. We don’t want to rush these
processes and be premature and get something we realized we actually didn’t
want. But that’s the first thing with this plurality of regulators. And the
second thing is, as Aaron was saying very well, Bitcoin is an interesting
thing. It’s not just money. And I just said Bitcoin. I shouldn’t say that; I
should say crypto-currency. Because we’ve got others; we’ve got the Alt Coins,
we’ve got new protocols like Aetherium. These are all tools that are basically
the block chain in common. And as Aaron was saying, the block chain has all
these different uses. You can use it to transmit value on a decentralized open
protocol. You can use it to register property. You can use it to unlock your
car. You can use it, you know these are all proposed
future uses. So we say okay, to a regulator it’s not just currency necessarily.
It could be a digital commodity or a digital asset. It could be bundled and
securitized or it could be used as a protocol to effectuate different things
that you do over a network. And at that point, regulators who are very smart
people who have had illustrious careers; this is all new to them. And you’re
telling them, well it’s like trying to explain the
internet in 1995. And at the same time trying to predict
Facebook in 1995. It’s not going to be IRC, it’s going to be all these other things.
Denise: And for anyone who finds themselves in the
position of having heard of Bitcoin and you might be somewhat familiar with
what a block chain is, or maybe not. One of the discussion points for our show
today is a piece written in January of this year by Mark Andresen called Why
Bitcoin Matters. And I highly recommend it. It’s great background and great
analysis of why this is a technology that has broad application. I’ll read you
part of it that sort of sets it up. He’s talking about the block chain and he
describes why it’s important. Bitcoin is the first practical solution to a
long-standing problem in computer science called the byzantine general’s
problem. To quote from the original paper defining the BGP, imagine a group of
generals of the byzantine army camped with their troops around an enemy city.
Communicating only by messenger, the generals must agree upon a common battle
plan. However one or more of them may be traitors who may try to confuse the
others. The problem is to find an algorithm to ensure that the loyal generals
will reach agreement. And then he goes on to say the practical consequence of
solving this problem is that Bitcoin gives us for the first time a way for one
internet user to transfer a unique piece of digital property to another
internet user such that the transfer is guaranteed to be safe and secure.
Everyone knows that the transfer has taken place. And nobody can challenge the
legitimacy of the transfer. The consequences of this breakthrough are hard to
overstate. So let’s talk about, people are familiar with Bitcoin, they’re
familiar with some of the problems that the company Bitcoin’s rapid growth. And
expansion, but they may not be as familiar with some of these alternate
technologies that we are eluding to; things right in
the crux of the startup sphere that Aaron deals with. Tell us some of the
interesting things that can be done with a block chain, Aaron that people might
not be thinking about right now.
Aaron: Sure, and one other point on the Mark Andresen’s
thesis. This is a technology that has been 20 years in the making. This is an
issue and a problem that people have been thinking about for 20 years. And the
fact that there’s a solution now, it’s a really big
deal. The applications for the block chain are pretty vast. One
area that basically the internet was forged in the early 1990’s and everybody
really wanted to build a digital currency at that time. There’s a bunch
of articles written at that point talking about the need to build a digital
currency for the internet. If you go on Google and search for Milton Freedman,
you can actually hear him speaking about this in the late 1990’s… about how a
digital currency is going to be brought to life. And now it’s finally here. And
one really amazing application for digital currency is that you can actually
get smaller than a penny. And that’s a big deal because a lot of things on the
internet have a lot of value. But that value might be lower than a penny. And
what people are working to build is systems where micro-payments are used to
one, dampen some of the noise that’s on the internet. So if every email had a
small stamp associated to it which was a fraction of a penny, the business
model for spammers would go away. We could actually have a spam-free internet.
That would be an enormous benefit to everybody who uses the internet. Another
thing that a lot of people online realize and they don’t really have a great
solution for is content. Content is either locked down or it’s freely
available. And I don’t think anybody is happy with either of those solutions. There’s good arguments on both sides. One thing that could
be developed with this technology and I’ve seen people working towards
developing with it, is actually tying micro-payments to content. And that means
every time you click on a piece of content, a small micro-payment would get
allocated to the creator of that content. And they would automatically get
paid. That could really transform the way we view content online. It would
actually incentivize and align everybody’s incentive, to be actually encouraged
at that point to spread it as far and wide as possible, if you knew you would
get a small micro-payment every time someone clicked it. So
one area that’s really exciting is micro-payments.
Peter: If I was going to interject real quickly and then
we’ll go back to you. For the people who are copy-left out there and I’ve
always been interested in the debate. I don’t take a strong point of view, but
block chains and these sorts of technologies could also be used for a system
where you don’t necessarily demand that people pay to view content. But you do
demand some kind of decentralized ledger that proves that content has been
borrowed and used by someone else. So you could take Creative Commons and the
fantastic… I mean Creative Commons already hacked the law years ago and it’s
pretty awesome. If you could take their business model and use the bock chain
as a database of reputation and attribution. And that would already, that’s
already an incentive for production. But sometimes you say oh I want to
attribute to somebody but this picture came up on Imgur or on Reddit and I have
no idea where it originated. If we could find a way to do that, that’s
fantastic as well. Back to you, Aaron.
Aaron: I think once you start thinking of an internet
that has micro-payments attached to it, you can also do some really interesting
things. For example, you could have remix fees associated with them. One issue
with the internet is how do you compensate people for
using their content. And they want to do something else with it. If you knew
you could get a piece of that in the form of a remix fee of some sort that
would be a pretty interesting thing to do. And in a world where there’s
micro-payments, that’s something that becomes available. And I think we’re
going to start seeing these types of systems develop pretty rapidly over the
next five years. Maybe that’s too short of a time line and maybe it’s 7-10 years. I think this is something people are
working towards and there’s a lot of value that people perceive in it. You’re
going to see a lot of innovation with it. The second area along with
micro-payments is the ability to digitize a contract. If you think about what a
contract is on a basic level, it’s really just the execution of a condition. Many parts of a contract, not all of them. If an event
occurs, you know a second event happen and a contract is a series of those
conditions. And using new technology, there’s a couple of projects that have
basically built the ability to build immutable, digital contracts. And that’s
also going to be a very important development in the terms of the internet. We
just talked about micro-payments. Well you know it’s highly likely that
associated with micro-payments will be micro-contracts. So a lot of
micro-contracts that people enter into over a long period, as they surf around
the internet, they just allocate resources. Along with some of the traditional
law that we practice as lawyers could… pieces of that, not all of it, but
pieces of that could get automated through these contracts. So that’s another exciting
part of that. And kind of an extension of micro-contracts is a whole slew of
other things that we know about today. And we use in finance and other areas.
There’s smart equity which would be the idea of using either
smart contracts and other block chain technology to help people raise
money online. In any way that they could conceivably imagine. And there’s also the idea that smart finance, which would be the idea of
basically using smart-contracts and/or micro-contracts to enable people to
build and create financial products that are traded on major markets. This is
really exciting technology. But going back to all the parties that could
potentially regulate this space, it really sorts to bump into a lot of areas
where there’s heavy regulatory schemes. So there’s going to be a lot of tension
here. I think at a fundamental level, the internet and the advances in
computer, putting a copying machine in everybody’s pocket, a computer in
everybody’s pocket; a block chain is going to really enable people to have a
commercial bank in their pocket, an investment bank, and a law firm in their
pocket. A world that has that much power on an individual level requires a lot
of thought and consideration to think about how we should dealing with this
technology.
Peter: As Aaron hinted on that slide of the many
different regulators, one of them is the CFTDC, the Commodities Future Trading
Commission; they just had an event yesterday. Their global market’s advisory
committee heard testimony from a number of people in the space who are trying
to either do something with a commodity, trading instrument with Bitcoin or
maybe even do commodity trading instruments through Bitcoin. And our executive
director, Jerry testified along with some people who are from the startup space
there. And also we have a link to who man should Dobbs’ piece on
smart-contracts. He is a law professor at New York Law School. What I think is
really interesting about this testimony about watching how regulators are
coming to view these issues. Or just coming to be aware they exist is that
there are two things to think about if you’re the CFTC. And they’re just
beginning to think about these things. And it will be interesting to see what
changes. The first thing is can we have dollar denominated currency swaps that
would actually enable people to watch the price of Bitcoin and put in an order
to buy or sell at different prices so that they can automatically hedge the
risk of price fallout and so on. So if you’re an innovator, if you have a
startup that’s going to use Bitcoin in some way, one of the things you would
worry about of course is that you’re going to be holding some Bitcoin as an
organization. And by holding that Bitcoin with the price volatility being high,
because you can get pretty big swings in the price of Bitcoin in a given day; I
think the average on a given day is something like 3.5% but sometimes we see 20
of course. It always hits the headlines. It’s a new asset. It’s exotic, people
are still figuring out how they feel about it. They have a new entrance. But if you’re holding that as part of your business, that is a
liability. So if there’s a way to hedge that holding through a
traditionally dollar denominated security, basically a commodity security, then
that really enables you to offload some of your risk onto a financial market
that’s willing to hold it. So that’s huge. And that’s coming soon. Already from
a group called Tera Exchange which is building this commodity instrument on
Bitcoin. But that’s just a traditional commodity’s instrument that is the
commodity in question, is Bitcoin. The other question is can we do commodities
trading through the Bitcoin protocol. Or through some other
cryptographic protocol. Because as Aaron was saying, we can program X
into these very complicated transactions that have conditions. They’re just
if/then structures, just like normal contracts. If the price hits this, sell
this many. That can all be done through automation. And that’s going to be a
big change. Of course we’re still going to need lots of humans involved in the
process to set these things up and make sure they run well. But you get a lot
of security from offloading the actual initiation and then completion of these
things to a network that will automate it. And it will be interesting to see
how the CFTC eventually comes around to feeling about that. How they’ll
regulate those transactions when they’re not happening in traditional exchanges
when they’re actually happening on a block chain. I think they’re just getting
started with that and it’s very exciting to see testimony like this because you
get to see people’s eyes light up like oh gosh, there’s new stuff out there. And
you hope you don’t see anyone’s eyes light up and say oh gosh, I’m going to be
replaced by a machine. Because that’s also not entirely true. We create jobs
when we destroy them in this hence, because someone has to use the machines.
And people are messy, you can’t really tailor all the
needs of a person with a robot. You need a person to deal with the person, and
then the better tool to do that interaction is the robot. It’s all very
interesting. I hope I didn’t freak anyone out or get weird.
Denise: No, but you could very well freak out lawmakers
with the conversation that we’re having here today. Off the top of my head, I
have so many questions by the way that have all flowed from the last 10 minutes
of conversation. I hope to get to at least some of them. The first one relates
to the most recent topic; and that is both the fluctuation of the value of
Bitcoin and the notion that you could offload some of the risk and have a
commodities market. Securities infrastructure is one of the most at least in
the U.S. highly and tightly regulated commercial enterprises that we have in
existence. And so when you float these ideas by lawmakers that we’re going to
have this very automated kind of financial infrastructure where the price
fluctuates wildly. And you could potentially displace things like the existing
commodities infrastructure with it. I could see a lot of freak-out happening. I
could see the people wanting to… we have regulations in place to control price
fluctuation. We have certain regulations in place to control misuse of
automation in the securities realm. Of course it happens anyway. So that’s a
whole other can or worms. There is a reason why it would be much harder to see
the kinds of misuse with technology in financial transactions that we sometimes
see in the stock market where people are beating each other by a fraction of a
second to squeeze out an additional gain from a transaction. That would
probably strike me intuitively, be difficult to do when you’re using a
distributed block chain. Because there’s really no way to game that, right?
Aaron: In terms of gaming the
system, I think the advantage for people who are in finances, if you have the
self-executing contracts they could be potentially quicker. Things that are
quicker in finance enable more efficient and liquid markets. That’s the
advantage of it. I think in terms of regulators looking at this, if something
looks like a traditional financial instrument, it clearly makes sense that a
U.S. regulator would look at it. But I think you bump into the same issues as
you do on the internet. You can’t stop somebody from going to another
jurisdiction where they might permit this and open up an exchange of some sort.
And once the cat’s out of the bag, it’s really hard to
stuff it back in. And shut the door. It’s the internet, and I think the same
issues that media companies and content companies have faced in terms of
dealing with the spread of content online. I think you’re going to see similar
things with regard to finance online. I think even more interesting and
presenting new opportunities and challenges is that it’s going to be a lot
easier for people to issue things that look a lot like securities or
commodities. There’s been a number of projects where
artists and other people are issuing their own alternative coins that are built
on similar technology as Bitcoin. And they’re using it to fund themselves and just
the idea is get in before I’m huge. And buy a bunch of my self-issued currency,
my Beyoncé coins. And as I get bigger and bigger and as I get huger and huger,
the value of that commodity would go up. I don’t know the minds of the
regulators but I don’t know of how they would react if there’s millions of people who are issuing their own coins. What’s the right way to
respond to that? I think that’s a really difficult question. I think in
watching the internet evolve, we’ve seen that when these types of technologies
hit the mass, like with music and MP3s and other things like that, that they
really raise difficult questions for lawmakers. Where there’s
not really clear answers on the right way to proceed.
Peter: I’m somewhat optimistic in the long run that
regulators will not only become comfortable with block chains. But they’ll
actually see them as an amazing tool for their own law enforcement purposes.
And I don’t mean spying on people. I know that’s immediately what a lot of
people are going to think. Peter at Coin Center is saying… I’m not even going
to finish that quote because I’m going to be quoted on it. What I mean is if
someone was to set up a new stock exchange using internet technology pre-block
chain, you would say, “Who the heck are you?” It’s like somebody said of eBay.
At first people were saying really you’re going to give your credit card number
to this stranger over the internet and they’re going to give you goods? But
that system evolved and it evolved to use reputation as a mechanism for doing
some degree of consumer protection. You shouldn’t be buying from someone who’s
someone else previously said had brought. But you’d still have to trust eBay
actually. That the reviews being posted were valid and this is the same
question that comes up with say services like Yelp these days. Are they gaining reputational assistance? The trust you have to
have in the person who’s starting the business is a little high in the early
days of the internet. What block chains afford you is it’s this decentralized
network. So it’s very much like the internet itself. It’s running through
TCP/IP but it’s actually a protocol of its own for provably sending things from
one place to another. And saying it’s been destroyed on this side and it now
exists on this side. And the process of how that happens provably saying it’s
gone here, there’s no fraud. It’s gone, I didn’t make a copy. I didn’t forge a
new dollar. And saying that it’s now over here, that process
is also transparent. Bitcoin is open-source software effectively. You
can actually go I think to Get Hub. I should know that for sure. But I think to
Get Hub and you can see the actual source code of Bitcoin. So there’s still a
level of trust for someone who’s not like a really high power coder. I would
not be able to say, yea that looks mathematically secure. But a regulator could
easily hire someone who’s brilliant and who would actually look at everything
that happens. All the math that happens to move the
asset from here to here. Or to bundle the security and say it would be very
difficult to game this. As an expert, me being a fake expert, as an expert, I
don’t think I could game this. And not only that, there’s, say Bitcoin right
now there’s about $5B of value in there. That’s a pretty cushy incentive to go
break the thing if you’re someone with bad ends. If you’re a
nasty person. And thus far we don’t, we see people infiltrate the
exchanges. Some of the centralized ways to access the
protocol. But we haven’t seen somebody actually in-mass, steal things
from the protocol or game the protocol itself.
Aaron: And that’s because the protocol is wrapped in
cryptography. And this cryptography is mathematically sound. I’ve spoken to a
lot of people who are building this technology. They say that it’s all wrapped
and encrypted. And until quantum computing gets invented, it’s going to be
difficult to peer in and understand to decipher all the cryptography that’s
being applied into this system. I think beyond the source code being
open-source, it’s a shared database. So you also have a record of every single
transaction. So you can go and download any of these block chains that are on
there. If it’s Bitcoin or Alt Coins and you can get a
full history of every single event that happened in the network using that
block chain. So from the very first moment, the genesis block to the latest
time that the entire network synchronized. And that’s a really powerful thing.
That means you can run metrics on the entire database. You can know that a
person with a certain wallet transferred funds from one wallet to another
wallet. And there is a high degree of
transparency to these systems in terms of events occurring without actually the
substance of the underlying event. It’s kind of like you know you’ve got a
safety deposit box. But you don’t know exactly what’s inside the safety deposit
box. If someone moved the safety deposit box and it left the bank, and put it
into another bank, you would know that that event occurred. And that’s very
powerful.
Denise: Okay, I want to move away from the 10,000-foot
level in a moment here and more into specifics. Some of which we’ve touched on.
Before that I want to do two things. First I want to put our first MCLE
passphrase into the show. And that’s going to be law firm in your pocket. Going
back to something Aaron said a moment ago. So we put these passphrases in the
show in case you are listening to the show for continuing legal or other
professional education credit. We have more information about MCLE in the 50
United States at our Wiki at wiki.twit.tv. If you find This Week in Law page
there, it will give you some information about your jurisdiction if you’re
interested at looking at that. And we put these phrases in because some of the
jurisdictions like you to be able to demonstrate that you watched or listened.
That’s why we do it. Secondly, we haven’t been hearing much from Warren Allen
on the show yet. And I suspect that’s because Warren you’re sitting there
taking furious notes because as someone who’s in charge of a legal hacking
movement where the idea is to put smart lawyers in technologists in a room and
try to figure out practical solutions to problems. And especially being in New
York with the Department of Financial Services there, looking into licensing
people working with Bitcoin; why don’t you tell us, Warren, what your approach
would be toward tackling the complexity of regulating this burgeoning
ecosystem. And whether you guys have done any work on that already.
Warren: Well we definitely have up here in New York. But
obviously D.C. has gotten some great presentations happening on this already.
And it’s something we’ve got to check out and put on the list of many things
that we want to do. But just from thinking about the regulation of Bitcoin at
this point, it’s really I think some of the analogies so far have been
comparing back to the early days of the internet. And someone mentioned CDA230
and provisions like that where you have the federal government stepping in and
saying hands off for now in terms of talking to the state regulators and state
causes of action. Taking this particular technology saying let’s see where this
goes and see how we should really wind up treating this. I think that’s
something that’s really going to be important for stimulating growth and
encouraging development to the new kinds of technologies that we’re talking
about here. Obviously it’s a pretty exciting area. If you have 50 state
regulators plus the federal government, and then we’re not even talking about
all the different potential connections that you can have internationally. The
European states, anyone else with a potential interest. If they all impose
their own regimes, it becomes pretty impossible to comply and possible from the
regulators’ side to enforce. I think establishing some sort of basic
protections and preemptive ground rules, I guess, could really be a huge step
in allowing cool things to continue to happen. So that’s one point that I would
definitely make on that side. Another point I think is that it’s really
interesting to think about potential security instruments in the Bitcoin space.
Because you’re really talking about something that a lot of the potential
investing public doesn’t really I think fully understand at this point. I mean
if I try to talk about Bitcoin and I certainly don’t have nearly the level of
understanding of it that… I think the other guests here do. So if I try to talk
about this with some of my friends, they may not really have a full grasp on it
either. And talking about it as a potential investment vehicle; where the
importance of our regulation regime right now is conveying information so that
the consumer of the investment can make a smart informed decision. That’s a
pretty steep hurdle at this point to climb. So that’s just something I’m making
as an observation based on the conversation we’re having here. But it’s
super-interesting, definitely at this point. And I think that it’s going to be
exciting no matter what. I’m curious to hear what thoughts you may have on that
point.
Denise: Anybody want to bite on that?
Aaron: I think the big thing is it’s really to start
thinking that this technology is broader than finance. It’s really the block
chain. It’s a shared database. Just like if you thought of the internet as
email back in 1998 that would have been problematic. Because there’s a lot more
that’s going on and that we’ve all seen happen over the past 15, almost 15
years. Once we saw the internet browser and the development of the hypertext
protocol and all these other amazing things that we’re interacting with on a
daily basis; if we stopped in 98 and just said we’re going to only allow email.
And only allow this technology called the internet to really deal with email, we would’ve lost a tremendous amount of value. That
would have been really bad for this country. That would have been bad for the
world. And we’re facing a situation again where we have a justice, a highly
disruptive-although that term is clichéd-technology, we’re facing situations
where regulators are rightfully popping up their heads and saying we need to
look at this more deeply. But caution might be a good idea here. To see how
this is developing. Every month a brand new technology is being used or
developed using this technology. And my concern is that if we act too quickly
and we act too rationally, that will really destroy a lot of value. And a lot of great things that we can do to really help the entire
world.
Denise: That just could not be a… go ahead, Peter. Finish
your thought, then I’m going to take us into some of
those specifics.
Warren: Sure, sorry it’s Warren. I just want to add one
final point. I just want to follow-up on that thinking because when email was
developed, you wound up with spam. And shortly after you got spam, you got
anti-spam laws. So it’s interesting because we do have specific regulations and
laws that affect elements of certain facets of the internet. So I think that’s
an interesting comparison. You could have very carefully-framed laws regarding
certain uses of Bitcoin again. But I think you’re probably right, that at this
point it’s too young of a technology to figure out what all those potential
uses could be and how you really want to frame the regulation of them.
Peter: As Aaron said, it’s very interesting that actually
sometimes it’s not just how do we deal with this as a
regulatory problem. It’s how do we use this to deal
with existing regulatory problems. So Aaron was explaining that you could put a
little stamp on emails and that would make a really good way to
dis-incentivizing people from spamming because they can’t send thousands of
emails because it would become costly at that point. Or as
digital copyrighters are saying. I think a big one too is consumer
protection. We’ll be filing another comment to the New York Department of
Financial Services about the bit license. And one of the things we want to
stress is right now in this country according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, we in 2012 alone had $30B worth of costs of
identity fraud and theft. That’s a massive problem that needs to be solved. And
there are some interesting new technologies that are slowly emerging from
Bitcoin which right now we see as a very shifty confusing possibly scary asset.
But there’s a technology called multi-signature transactions wherein you put
three keys on a wallet. And you have your Bitcoins there and then you go to pay
for something and two of those keys have to be turned in order to send the
funds to the person at the store. And let’s say we have the three keys, the
customer has two, but only one of them is on their phone. And then an
intermediary which is doing fraud protection is doing the third. So when the
customer goes to pay for the thing at the store, the customer’s phone initiates
the transaction. The fraud protection service watches and says oh yea, he’s buying
something at the normal bodega at his apartment. Of course, confirm. The
transaction goes through. But on the other hand if someone steals the person’s
phone and it’s in evil hands. And this person tries to transfer all of the
Bitcoins or crypto-currency out of the person’s wallet, the fraud protection
service will look at that and say well I don’t know who you’re sending this
too. And you’re sending all of your money away. I think this is not you. I
think this is your phone being stolen. I’m not going to sign off on the
transaction. And the thief just has one key. They have the phone because the
actual user, they kept their other key safe in a safety deposit box in a bank. Or maybe in their sock drawer or something. And so you get this really neat mathematically-based fraud
protection that is much superior than our currently, massively problematic as
exemplified by Target and Home Depot and the J.P. Morgan breach. Massively-fraud payment system right now when it comes to the risk
of identity theft. And so that should be an opportunity. That should be
something a regulator sees and goes oh, cool. We can use these tools and we can
ask people. We can ask companies to use these tools because these tools make
our job of safeguarding our constituents that much easier.
Aaron: Exactly.
Denise: Absolutely. And we hope that some of them will
begin paying attention and looking at Bitcoin as not something to be
controlled. But to be monitored and developed and used productively. Let’s take
a break. If you’re like me, we’ve been going along. We’ve been terribly
interested in this discussion. This happens to me all the time. Where I’m too
busy living my life to eat. I want you to take a break now and think about
whether you have given yourself sufficient nutrition. And in order to help you
do that in a healthy way, I’d like to let you know that our show today is
brought to you by Nature Box. Right now Nature Box is giving you a chance to
get a free trial box of their most popular snacks. And I’m very serious. This
happens to me all the time. I get up in the morning and have some coffee and
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4:30 in the afternoon and I haven’t eaten a thing. And at that point, I am
absolutely starving and wherever I am, whatever is food, I’m going to reach for
it and just gobble it down because I need something to keep going. So that is
why it’s so great to keep Nature Box on hand. It gets you away from the vending
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yourself… maybe we could put it all on the block chain. Then you could monitor
who devoured all the sea salt pop-pops. These are going fast in my house right
now.
Aaron: That’s not that far-fetched.
Denise: There we go. The big island pineapple, also has been very popular.
Peter: And your fridge could be programmed to order even
more.
Denise: That’s right. I would need to. Although
Nature Box makes that…
Peter: Only from Nature Box.
Aaron: Yea, exactly. Nature Box.
Denise: They make that super-simple right now because you
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out in the desert here and they’re all different varieties that we get in our
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naturebox.com/twit. Thank you so much, Nature Box for your support of This Week
in Law. Alright, we have some very specific applications of block chain technology.
We’ve touched on some of them and we’ll get into some that we haven’t
mentioned. Let’s start with spam. We’ve been talking about spam and it was one
of the primary reasons the internet started to be regulated in the first place.
Now we have a new technology that could perhaps do away with the need for
regulation of spam. Because it would make it technologically
unadventageous. Could you go a little deeper on that, Aaron? And tell us
exactly… it seems to me what you’re saying is that in order to send an email,
there would be some-even if it’s a tiny-financial consequence to doing so. Is
that what you’re envisioning?
Aaron: Yea, so think about a spammer’s business model.
It’s let’s send millions of pieces of email. Or a million posts to various
blogs or other things like that and hope we get a small fraction of them to
click a link. And a small fraction of them to buy a product
or enter into some scam that we’re running. And then we make our money
and we’re happy and everybody else on the internet is crying. So the idea is if
you actually just put a very small payment, you know .0005 cents or something
like that; that would be enough to just obliterate that business model. And it
wouldn’t be feasible for them or anybody to do that. The big technological limitation
is, that’s great, but how do we ensure we have micro-payments hardwired into
the internet. And that’s what people are working on. There’s a project called Aetherium.
And they’re working hard to basically build a general-purpose computational
machine that has a browser. That basically has the block chain built into it.
Just like how HTTP is built into the browser now. They would have their block
chain built into the browser of the future. And it would enable these types of
transactions.
Denise: It seems to me a little bit scary for people who
see the internet as a great egalitarian tool that anyone, even people with very
marginal resources can find a way to access and use at their public library or
their school. And then if we’re talking about taking something that is freely
accessible now or various aspects of it, and putting even micro-payments on
them, that that could be problematic in an access to the resource kind of way.
Don’t you think?
Aaron: Sure, I think that’s right. I think what they’re
envisioning would be backwards-compatible. So whatever is freely available now,
continue to be available. This could be an additional add-on. You can imagine a
service where you get normal email and maybe that has some spam with it. But if
you wanted to pay 50 cents a month, you could have a spam-free email box or
something like that. But I think that’s a really good concern. This technology
isn’t perfect. I think it’s going to have a lot of downsides to it, too. The
unbalanced benefit would be…
Peter: You think you could actually pay the person you’re
sending the email to, to read it? I mean just as a spam-protection method.
Because we already sort of do this with LinkedIn, right? You can buy credits in
order to contact people who are far away from you. And people could set, in
order to get into my priority inbox, you’re going to need this many coins
attached to your email. I don’t know if I like this idea. It sounds kind of,
well I don’t know. But it’s fascinating. Sorry, I just said…
Denise: Gaming the inbox.
Certainly business models have technology business models have been built
around paying the customer. Remember the free PC where the person was agreeing
to get pummeled with lots of ads.
Aaron: Yea, those pop-up ads. Yea, I remember that.
Denise: It wasn’t the greatest thing in the world but it
could work.
Peter: This is something that’s very interesting with
Bitcoin or crypto-currencies where you could build this system wherein you want
to build in some costs to make things run better. Because
scarcity allows us to figure out how to allocate resources. We would do
it based on demand. But instead of having a centralized authority decide how to
price things or how to screen things on the internet, you could literally just
enact it through a neutral platform. And have the actual user decide what they
want to price their time at. I’d rather pay the person who I want the attention
of rather than pay the intermediary who is going to be my gateway to getting
there. If I had to pay at all. I’d rather not pay at all.
Denise: Right, and maybe it makes sense. Just sort of thought of experimenting this as we are here. Maybe it makes sense if the person who’s trying to contact you is a perfect
stranger. Not someone you’re close to and familiar with. That if there is some
sort of financial gain involved and you clicking on that email.
Peter: And this is just a great example. This is just a
conversation that we’re all having. None of us are going to start this
business. But we’re all thinking there’s all these
possibilities. We could do it this way; we could do it that way. It’s got to
look a lot like the internet looked in 1995 for someone who is really
interested in it. Like oh wow, we can do this and we can do this. So those are
the many, many possibilities that Aaron’s been talking about and what we’ve
been talking about. That we really hope are preserved and that some degree of
light-touch regulation allows to continue.
Denise: So let’s look at the micro-payments for content
concept. There’s an article out there about Bitcoin saving journalism. This is
in our run down at delicious.com/thisweekinlaw/278. All the things we’re
talking about today are in there if you want to look in. There’s some great
content in there and I really encourage people to read the articles that we’re
talking about and that have sort of teed up the show today for us. But how
Bitcoin could save journalism and the arts is the article at time.com. Let’s
talk about that for a moment and also I guess we can fold into this discussion
the group that you’re working with, Aaron, called Monograph. Which
is about creating a registry that helps create scarcity for digital art. How can Bitcoin help people who write and create and hope to be paid for it?
Aaron: Sure, so Monograph is a really interesting
project. It started by a NYU art professor here in New York. He came up with an
amazingly brilliant idea. He has created scarcity in a digital world using the
block chain. You know the block chain is a shared database and what it can do
is also record and timestamp things. And it can create worldwide property
registries. So using this technology is conceivable. We could have a worldwide
copyright registry, or a worldwide trademark registry. In one area where there’s a lot of registries is the art world. That’s how
they keep track of art and getting appropriate title to art work. And what
Monograph does is it basically allows you to take a digital piece of art that
you’ve made and pronounce the world and timestamp it so everybody knows that
that is the unique, first, original version of the art work that’s been
created. And what the people at Monograph think can be generated from that is a
market around that. So a lot of artists now are not really painting anymore.
They’re using their computers and making this amazing digital art. They have a
hard time selling that art. One example is they actually recently found all
this digital art that Andy Warhol made. And there needs to be a way to be able
to mathematically verify that this is the original. This is the absolute only
copy that matters that I’m gaining ownership of. So what Monograph is hoping to
do is create this system that allows artists to sell their art work. And create
scarcity around something that should have a bit of scarcity to it.
Denise: Wow that’s a fascinating idea. So it sort of
bundles in the whole concept of DRM without actual DRM.
Aaron: Yea, it’s not DRM.
Warren: Is there no DRM?
Peter: It’s just a registry.
Aaron: DRM, yea and you know I think the idea is to wrap
it around something that I was talking about before which would be some sort of
container. Where you could collect payments if it was put on
another site or something else like that. And that’s all getting worked
out but the idea is really digital content is fabulous. It can spread
everywhere. But there is some pockets where scarcity
matters. And where scarcity has a premium and using a block chain you can
actually begin to create a space for that, and a
market for that. But beyond just art, the idea that… maybe it’s because I’ve
been a practicing lawyer especially in the intellectual property space. All of
these intellectual property registries are highly inefficient. We’re at a point
where we can technically build something that’s like a global copyright
registry where you can actually just drag and drop something onto a block
chain. And everybody around the globe could do it. We could say this is the
original work and I’m claiming ownership of it. Or this is the trademark that I
want to file and I’m claiming ownership of it. That would create huge amounts
of efficiencies. If you even take it beyond intellectual property but to real
actual property, you can imagine a worldwide property exchange. It would be
just as easy for people to buy a piece of property in the U.S. as it is in
another country. If we had a system like that, the matter of efficiency that
would be presented would be astronomical.
Denise: Let’s stay on the art metaphor for a moment. I’m
an artist. I’ve created an original and I want to create a digital work that mirrors
what I would do in the real world. I’m going to create an
original and maybe 10 lithographs. The digital
equivalent of a lithograph of my original. And so the original’s going
to sell for more. I’m going to have 10 that are technically identical copies of
the originals. Because that’s how digital artifacts work. You make an identical copy or maybe I suppose you could slightly change each of
the lithographs. But then that would be that. And you would be able to control
that using the block chain without DRM. And that would be one business model.
Am I getting that right?
Aaron: Yea, that’s the just of it. You would record it
and be able to transfer title to that record. So that somebody could waive the
equivalent of a digital piece of paper and say no, I own the original and
here’s my proof that I own the original.
Peter: To be clear, I feel that if the art work-and this
is just me thinking through this-if the art work is displayed on a screen and
you can see it, there has to be some process that makes that visible. That
decrypts it from the block chain and makes it visible. And it’s only going to
allow you to decrypt it if you’re the rightful owner on the ledger. So to be
clear, I still feel we would need digital rights management of a store to make
that visible, would be not visible; it would be a scrambled thing on the block
chain or somewhere you would decrypt using the block chain.
Aaron: No you could take every digital file as just a
series of bits, zeros and ones. And you can create a unique hash for that file.
And that file, that hash is what gets registered to the block chain.
Peter: Once it’s encrypted, you could copy it and send
it. You could make a copy of the fourth lithograph and then you haven’t really
solved this scarcity problem because you’d have piracy still.
Aaron: There definitely could be people that make copies
and change a bit and make it something else. But the point is that the way it
would work would wrap it and make it obscured until you have rights to view it.
It would just allow somebody to say, here’s an original piece of art work and
this is the actual original. And if other people use it, there’s not much you
can do about it. But knowing just as a verifiable fact, this is the original
the artist intended to be the original. The thesis is, that will create value for that item. In the art world where I think people
want to have the original, being able to prove that should enable digital artists
to get compensated for their art work at higher levels than they are today. And
I think that would be a very valuable thing.
Peter: I didn’t mean to poo-poo the idea. It’s a great
idea. It’s interesting you could also try to do it with DRM. Which I’m sure
somebody will. If the RIAA ever gets hint to Bitcoin, we’re all screwed right?
Maybe nobody will buy their block chain products. But I feel like you could do
it with cryptography and DRM, too. And we’ll see if that happens. But I like
the just of it, getting the warm fuzzies from knowing you’ve got copy three,
that’s cool too.
Denise: Let’s look at the alternate universe of journalism
and writing. We could look at music and movies, and TV too. All of which are
very freely copied. The rights-holders are up in arms because their works get
copied whole or in part without their permission. Readily
available elsewhere on the net. Monetized elsewhere on
the net through ads. And they want to put a stop to that. They also
probably, let’s stick with journalism and keep our brains on one channel here.
Say I’m the New York Times or local newspaper or Mashable, or whomever. I am a
known brand with a known audience and I am putting out good content. And I want
there to be both fair uses of my content and licensed uses of my content. But I
don’t want there to be unlicensed uses and I want to be able to control those.
How does the block chain step in there, Peter?
Peter: It’s sort of the same idea. It’s that you would
use some form of encryption on the data that you’d want to read. And the only
way to decrypt that is to have a ledger, truthfully show that you’ve made the
micro-payment that corresponds to getting the key to then read the encrypted
digital content.
Denise: Or in the case of getting a license like you were
talking about earlier with Creative Commons. There wouldn’t necessarily need to
be a payment as long as the parties are in agreement that the use is okay.
Aaron: Right, the great thing about micro-payments is
that when we’re talking about paying for content, we could be talking about
fractions of a penny. We could also be talking about fractions of fractions of
a penny. So you want to have some sort of token to actually show that something
has moved from being held by one person to another person. But we do this in
contracts. We call it consideration and we say the law does not inquire into
the actual value of the consideration. We just need to know that there was real
consideration given and then the law will recognize that as a contract. So what
you could do is have this registry of who read whose things or who borrowed
from whose things and modified them. And there’d be this sort of token
consideration. This tiny micro-payment that was paid to
symbolize that interaction between two people. So we’re not talking
about oh you’re not ever going to be able to mix up Beyonce and Gotya unless
you pay $50,000. We’re saying you’re not going to be able to mix them up unless
you pay 0.0000003 of a penny because we want to immortalize the fact that
you’ve done this. So that Beyonce and Gotya, they don’t really need the credit.
Some obscure artist knows this has happened and they actually get the credit
for the original.
Denise: Is there a privacy concern here? Obviously all of
our activities on the net as we speak now without having everything live on a
block chain, are tracked as much as they can be by
people who want to track and use that data. But it seems like when it is all in
a ledger that becomes even more problematic potentially. Or
no?
Aaron: I disagree. This is what’s really cool about this.
Creative Commons from what I understand-and I’ve never been on the inside of
that organization-when they were rolling out the Creative Commons licenses,
there was this internal discussion of oh should we try and make sure that
people attribute by keeping a registry? How would we do that with existing
technology back then in the beginning of the 2000s. And the feeling was gosh,
the only way we’re going to be able to do that is with cookies or with clear
pixels. And we’re basically doing pretty draconian private surveillance on all
the people that use Creative Commons. And that’s totally, like the Venn diagram
of people that like cookies and people that like Creative Commons; it’s not
really connected. There is some connection. They all work at Google I think.
But now we have this alternative way of building a registry. So you don’t need
to spy on everyone, IE every time somebody comes across a website without even
realizing what they’ve come across; a cookie is saved or a clear pixel is
saved. We say no if you want to use the thing in a certain way, then you have
to voluntarily transact with the person and immortalize that. What’s the
difference between being violated and just living publicly and being social?
What’s the difference between Facebook and the NSA? Well, it’s voluntary
choice. And the block chain can immortalize that voluntary choice that you
made, rather than just immortalize the fact that you accidentally stumbled
across something. I think that makes some sense as a distinction.
Warren: I just actually had a question because it seems to
me that we’re talking about a technology and it seems like technology is not
really going to be good or bad. But I definitely think we can see some negative
uses. Like we’re talking about the RIAA and definitely and also talking about
potentially; clearly it can be used to protect privacy. I’m also just thinking
through some of the examples in that it can also be used to provide really
tight lock down surveillance on people potentially. Depending on how the
technology wound up being implemented. So my question I think would be from
people who are on the front lines of dealing with Bitcoin and crypto-currency
and this kind of technology, is how do you set the right norms so that we wind up
getting good uses. And I think going back to our earlier discussion, good uses will at least help in staving off bad regulation. How do you sort of
set up those kinds of norms that you wind up with the kinds of good uses that
allow us to creating cool technology?
Peter: I think that’s why we need organizations like
Legal Hackers.
Aaron: Seriously.
Peter: Matching the technologists will build these
technologies with lawyers who really want to solve; because you know some of us
get into law for the money. But I think a lot of us get into law because we; I
think Richard Epstein who is a beloved professor of mine says that politicians
and economists and public policy people, they like to take the view from 10,000
feet. And point the ship of policy in one direction. It’s the lawyers that are
down in the bowels of the ship, shoveling coal into the boilers and figuring
out how to make the whole damn thing work. And Bitcoin and crypt-graphic
technologies are a real opportunity to give amazingly powerful technological
tools to individuals as opposed to a big organization. As
opposed to a government organization or as opposed to a big corporation like
Facebook. And say actually we can build this amazingly organized
governance just from piecemeal actions of this lawyer working with this smart
contract, working with this smart property. And building a
kind of interaction amongst those people voluntarily. That’s an amazing
thing. That hasn’t happened so much before; not in the world of physical value.
It’s only happened in the world of the internet which is this sort of, you’ll
have organizations like Creative Commons come up and say oh hey the internet’s
here. We can create a way of having standardized licenses that are less
draconian than traditional copyright protection. So we can spread them all
over. Getting really interesting people like Creative Commons involved in
Bitcoin, I think that’s a huge win. Or getting the people who go to the legal
hackers meet up who are the net Larry Lessings out there, to hack on Bitcoin and
learn how to hack on Bitcoin. It’s going to be amazing; I’m very optimistic. Which of course is why I work at a place like Quinn Center I
suppose.
Denise: Yes, let’s talk about some other getting to the
good uses encouraging good policy questions. There’s a piece at the Wall Street
Journal talking about Bitcoin fighting the Ebola crisis. As if you can find,
this is the greatest confluence of headline grabbers. Bitcoin
and Ebola in the same headline.
Peter: We forgot ISIS. But we really don’t want ISIS.
Denise: So, Aaron, do you want to take a stab at how
Bitcoin and/or block chain technology could help contain the terrible Ebola?
Aaron: Yea, I think that was classic link-bait but it’s
really… what Bitcoin can do in one of the first applications people see is
really to build a global payment system. It’s really hard now to transfer money
around the globe. Just like back in the early 90’s, it
was really hard to send a letter to somebody in another country. Email came
about and all of a sudden people could communicate really easily from the U.S.
to someone in South America, to someone in Europe. As that reached a mass
scale, we saw all those efficiencies that we’ve been living in for the past 15
plus years. The same idea, the payment infrastructure for the U.S. and the
payment infrastructure for the world, it’s just not there yet. The payment
infrastructure in the U.S. went digital through the aged system. And a decade
ago it hasn’t really gotten a revamp. And there’s not really one single, global
payment rail that everybody can hit if they want to make a payment of some
sort. And people think that not Bitcoin as a speculative of currency, but
Bitcoin as the block chain and registering transactions. Or another block
chain-like system could be something that does that. And that would mean that
if in the context of Ebola, we heard there was an awful thing that happened in
another country, we could easily make donations and send our money without lots
of fees getting taken out in between. And that could really be a wonderful
thing. On the flip side, if you’re in a country that doesn’t have a great
payment system, much like if you’re in a country that doesn’t have a great
communication system-IE the internet-you would now utilize this global payment
system to enter into the rest of the world. And the potential for that is
really astounding. If everybody in the world could kind of use the same system
and could kind of do business using this same pipe, then it’s unimaginable what
we can do. We could easily send our products to rural Africa or other places
like that which we just can’t do now because we don’t have the infrastructure
in place.
Denise: We also… go ahead.
Aaron: I was just going to say that this is something
that people are getting excited about. The Federal Reserve is fully aware that
their payment system needs to be updated. They have a big initiative about
this. Other banking officials that I’ve spoken to, I know other people have as
well, are really looking at this technology. At least exploring it to see if
it’s something that can be used to help bring us up to date and make sure that
we can start doing these things.
Denise: Right, and we’ve been
talking a lot on this show over the years about machine assisted contracts,
streamlining the contracting process. We’ve touched on it a bit in this show
today with artists and creators. And if you want to easily grant a license or
maybe there’s a micro-payment involved. Maybe there’s not. But taking it beyond
that to the more general world of contracting we’ve been talking about: smart
contracts, a bit on the show. And I want to get a little deeper into that here
and have you guys explain to me and our listeners and
viewers why the block chain really puts that on a fast track. Why don’t we
start with Peter?
Peter: Okay, so we’ve been talking about it in the
abstract. And I supposed getting more into the weeds is helpful. Although it starts to get difficult to explain. What I like
to say is just fundamentally speaking, what cryptographic currency has enabled
us to do with block chains is as I said provably show
that something existed in somebody’s particular address. They’re called a
public address, to which only they have a private key to access the things in
that address. Has moved to someone else’s public address and now they have the
only key to that thing. And so that’s the basis of value transfer. What’s
actually happening is there’s this little phrase that gets sent out to all the
computers on the Bitcoin network, or the Bitcoin protocol. And that phrase says
Peter transfers this much to Denise or to Aaron or whatever. And those
computers, some of them are called mining clients and they’re just software
that some people choose to run. And the software then looks at what I just
said, I wanted to send this to this, and they say okay I’m going to add that to
my list of everyone’s transactions that are happening right now. And they add
that to this list and they solve this difficult math problem that was set up by
the last person to mine and to describe all the transactions. And that happened
somewhere between one and 10 minutes ago, that last person described all the
transactions. And they set up this math problem. And now this new person is
doing the same thing along with all the other people on the network. Trying to describe all the transactions in the 10 minutes. Solve the difficult math problem in order to write the next blah in this ledger
of all the transactions that are happening. And the first person to do it, and it’s very difficult to predict who will be the first
person to do it. Because solving that math problem was so difficult that if one
computer was working on it by itself, it could run for thousands to millions of
years. But if many, many hundreds of thousands or millions of people are
working on solving the problem, then we know with some
statistical certainty that within about 10 minutes, one person-we don’t know
who-will stumble across the answer. And they will write the actual ledger. What
they’re actually writing down is normally this simple sentence that says Peter
sent Denise this many coins. But that’s not all Satoshi Nakamoto, the anonymous
inventor of Bitcoin allowed for you to actually say. You can say more complex
sentences, it’s not just Peter sends to Denise this many coins. It’s Peter has these
coins in his public address and has one key to this public address. Aaron has
this other key and they turn the keys simultaneously, and only when they turn
both their keys do the funds actually move to the next person which is Denise.
So you can build these sentences of how you want value to move through. And a
sentence can be as simple as one person to one person. It can be more complicated, two people to one person. If
the two people agree. Or it can involve variables like time, like two
people agree and this time has happened. So the Bitcoin
network can keep track of time and say at this date in the future it should go
through. And finally you can also in theory, invoke external variables out in
the world. These are called oracles sometimes. So it would be the contracts
going to go to query a price from say the New York Stock Exchange ticker. And
say when the price of this hits this, then the transaction should go through.
So you get to start to see all of the elements, many of the elements of common
law contracting here. If this contingent fact realizes, then this result should
happen. If this doesn’t then this result should happen. Then you can set that
up all X-anti so it will happen, deterministically through the math. Now you
can’t necessarily write a complete contract with all the squishy human
variables that we find important like the particular nature of a warranty or
when a product is broken or not broken. And therefore you deserve a refund. But
a lot of the in between as far as where to go and get the refund can be
effectuated automatically. Say you had somebody who is appointed as an
arbitrator to say yes that product was broken actually. They turn their key.
And that’s what actually makes the refund happen automatically. And you can
pick that person automatically.
Denise: Wow that is so fascinating. And just from your
description, the most obvious thing that comes to mind is a real estate
transaction. Where what you’re describing is the escrow process where people
put things into a trusted third-party account for holding purposes until a
bunch of conditions are satisfied. And then the transaction closes. And it
sounds like if block chain technology gets involved in a lot of contracts, the
escrow people are going to be looking around for something else to do.
Peter: Well yes and no. They’ll just have better fools to
do their job. Right now they have filing cabinets full of people’s things that
we have to trust them to keep good order of. But there’s probably still someone
who’s actually a real person who’s looking out and saying the transaction went
south or the transaction did go south. So that person still has a need to
exist. We’re still going to need to know whether they bought the money pit and
the Victorian house actually had no floor. And that’s going to be a real person
still. And they’re going to have a better tool to do that. It’s just like
letter writing didn’t stop happening when we got email. It just got easier.
Someone who writes letters or does talk shows for a living can now do it at
their home as opposed to doing it at an inefficient corporation.
Denise: So tell us exactly why, Peter, is your parents’
deed in the block chain?
Peter: I actually did that. Warren will appreciate this.
I did that in order to show that slide at the legal hackers meet up here in
D.C.
Warren: Love that.
Peter: If you’re in D.C. you should show up. They do
great stuff. But I had talked about how my parents recently bought this house
out in the eastern shore of Maryland and because I was a dork who was still in
NYU Law at the time taking a property class I wanted to say well how do we know that we own it. And if you’ve taken property law,
you know there is a grantor and a grantee index. And
the amazing thing about a grantor index in the context of this discussion is
that it looks like the block chain. It’s just the block chain with really old
documents that say bequeaths to Van Valkenburgh from Bub. I think that’s
actually the final link in the block chain of this property registry, is from
someone named Bub to my parents. And the funny thing is, if you keep that slide
up, you can see in the upper right hand corner in the deed on the left, there’s
some text there. And it’s too small to read, but it’s actually all the money
that had to be paid in order to make this thing get saved in a Talbot County
clerk registry. And it’s $5,000. It’s not a huge fee. It’s $5,000 as compared to the value of the house which is somewhere around $300,000
I think. Not to air my family finances on the internet, but I just did. And so
the really tricky thing about the grantor-grantee index, and the reason it
exists, is that you’ll have people who show up and say actually I had this
deed. I’ve always had this deed to this house. And you got a deed from someone.
I don’t know who you got it from. He gave it to me before he gave it to you.
And that’s the double-spending problem in computer science actually. That’s the
exact same thing that Bitcoin was built to solve. Was to create this provable
record that says no, actually you can’t spend that Bitcoin twice at two
retailers. You spent it once and now we know you don’t have it anymore. And so
it’s kind of fun. A fun way to explain Bitcoin to lawyers I think who actually
are geeked out about grantor-grantee indexes. Is that you can do all this with
a block chain. And you can do it lightning fast and without the $5,000 title
fee. A much lower fee, like the fee you would pay as a retainer to your family
lawyer who knows how to use technology.
Denise: So we’re going to make dad’s deed the second MCLE passphrase for this episode of This Week in Law.
Peter: Its dad’s and mom’s. They’re joint.
Denise: Mom and dad’s deed. I will take either dad’s deed
or dad and mom’s deed. And well again, people are already, I just keep coming
back to if the block chain becomes the transaction registry for everything,
then doesn’t that take a technology that thrives and is exciting because of its
decentralization, and make it a centralized resource for a whole lot of data?
Aaron: It’s not going to be one block chain. I think most
people are assuming there’s going to be multiple block chains. So like right
now, just like we have different databases that we use but they’re just locked
behind a company. So if we want to use eBay, we have to go to ebay.com. And
enter into a transaction with another person who is also registered with eBay.
And then all that information is stored in eBay’s database. In the future, you
could just have a shared block chain that nobody really owns that facilitates
all the same transactions that eBay is doing. So the only person under the law
person who’s taken out of the equation is eBay. And now you just have a shared
resource. And it’s kind of facilitating the same type of transactions that have
happened. And people are already building this. You can go and look up a
project online called online bizarre. And this is what they’re building, a
completely decentralized eBay. Messaging systems is the same thing. Right now
we go to Google and if we use Gmail, and we send a message. It records in a database.
And then somebody else accesses that record in a database. You can have a
messaging block chain which just facilitates that same transaction without the
need for it to pass through Google’s servers. It could just be on multiple
different servers all around the internet. Dropbox, Uber, all of these
companies. All they really are, are middle-men. And
they all are running databases and I think over time we’re just going to see a
lot of these middle-men either run decentralized databases
and just kind of be the managers of that, or their business models are
going to get tightened to a point where it might not be feasible for them to
really operate anymore.
Peter: And I’m not too apocalyptic as far as predicting
the intermediaries for disappearing. As I said we’re still talking about, it’s
like we’re talking about the internet in 1994. But my half-baked prediction is
actually we still keep intermediaries and as we were just talking about,
they’ll have a decentralized database. But they still serve a purpose and that
purpose is going to be creating the user interface or the user experience to
actually access the decentralized database. And that’s a very important thing.
Right now when we talk about these things, these things can to some extent be
done by typing very long strings of characters into a computer terminal that
interacts with the Bitcoin client that interacts with the Bitcoin network.
These are all things that my grandmother is frightened by because she thinks
her computer is watching her in the middle of the night. It’s true. She does
use computers, well you know. But how do we get my grandmother to trust
something like this and it’s going to be a really good user interface. And
that’s something that robots don’t do well but people still do well. So Uber
might decide they’re still going to connect drivers with people who want to be
driven. But they’ll be able to negotiate with each other in a decentralized
marketplace for all the cars in the area. But Uber’s still got a very important
job. They’ve got this job of building the smartphone app that interacts with
that decentralized database, making it look good, making people feel
comfortable with it. And maintaining it, and even marketing
and advertising. Those are very important things as well. Half of our
economy must be persuasion. I get the feeling, and that’s not really a waste.
That’s people talking about what they care about.
Denise: I hear people talk a lot about Bitcoin and block
chain-related technologies as being a solution to security and surveillance and
everything else. And maybe you can expand a bit on that because what I’m
hearing from our discussion today and my understanding coming into it is that
when we’ve got a registry that it all relies on having a very public registry
of information. That is transparent and verifiable. And part of the way people
rely for good or bad on privacy today is these various silos of information
where their data lives. And the fact that it’s not public and transparent. And
that not only the people facilitating the transactions have access, but really
anyone has access to information stored on a block chain, don’t they? So does
this just create not… okay well enlighten me then. Because I’m envisioning this
whole world of data mining enterprises that are all based on looking at
transactions on the block chain, no?
Aaron: Yea, no, so here’s the trick. And here’s what’s
really clever about it. It’s that everything on the block chain is wrapped in
public-private key cryptography. So there’s a public facing event that
everybody knows occurred. But the substance of what that event is, nobody
knows. So for example, here’s an example in terms of privacy and how people are
talking about how a block chain could be used to enhance privacy, this is what
it would look like. Let’s say there was just an identity block chain. This was
a block chain that stored all of your personal information that you usually put
into websites. So it has your name, your last name, your address, your credit card numbers. Maybe multiple
credit card numbers. Maybe additional people who are
authorized to use your credit card or other information. And that’s all
stored on a block chain of some sort. And everybody’s information is stored
there but nobody can look at each other’s information. So I can’t peer in and
see what your information looks like because it’s encrypted. I don’t have the
private key to unlock that lockbox to figure out that information. And I don’t
know what Peter’s information is either. And you extract that for millions and millions
of people.
Denise: If you do have the key, that’s when you can look
at Peter’s parents’ deed?
Aaron: The real value that this technology can pass along
to companies is that if there is an identity block chain, then they wouldn’t
have to worry so much about security. The way a website could work, let’s say
you’re logging into the eBay of the future, this decentralized eBay. They could
just say identity block chain, is this a human being?
And the block chain could send back a ping that says yes. Or identity block
chain, I need the credit card information for this person can you just give me
that? And then the block chain could send it back, just the credit card
information without all this other data. And they would never need to store
this data so hackers would have a much harder time going around and finding all
these vulnerabilities on all these different sites. And that could save
companies a lot of money. When J.P. Morgan lost 70 plus user account
information, that’s a serious problem for them just in terms of sending out
notices, it’s going to be very expensive. I’m sure if they had a solution like
this and it was actually built, and this is a solution that isn’t build but
people are talking about, that’s something they would at least be interested in
and integrating in the same way. So that’s kind of how privacy could look using
a distributed technology like this.
Denise: Peter, we’ve already splashed your parents’
property information all over the internet as you mentioned. But can anyone
else who’s interested in getting that information, can they go to the block
chain and get it? Or is it cryptographically shielded from them?
Peter: So what I actually did, like a real decentralized
grantor-grantee index doesn’t yet exist. It would be something that you’d hope
either a law of services corporation in a given area
would help to start build and maintain and help people access. Or it would be
something that a local government maybe chose to adopt as their way to securely
and authoritatively describing the sequence of deeds and records, and what owns
what, when. What I used is something much more primitive. Again, internet circa
1995, it’s called proof of existence. I think it’s proofofexistance.com. But if it’s not there, just Google
Proof of Existence. And that service is much simpler. All that service
does is, you take a document and what it will do is it will look at that
document. The bits that are in that document and it will create a unique
cryptographic hash which is sort of like a unique scramble of that document.
And it will put that hash which is just a way of saying there’s no way to get
this number by guessing. Unless you have the input. So
if you then have the deed as an input and you hold it up against the hash which
is on the block chain, you can say that’s that hash. And so you provably say
the only way that hash only got into the block chain at the time that it says
it was in the block chain was because the document existed. If the document
hadn’t existed, if you uploaded a different document, the hash would have been
different. Because the hash looks the way it does and because it was in the
block chain two years ago, this deed existed two years ago. So actually right
now, it could be used by a lawyer. If somebody else came up and said oh that deed
says Bub to Van Valkenburgh two years ago. I have a deed that says Bub to Van
Valkenburgh one year ago. And you’d say, well I mean we have to… okay so I set
it up a little bit wrong. If the deed doesn’t say anything, you know just
imagine this deed that didn’t have a date. It’s a really lousy deed. And if
there’s someone else that says I have a deed and it doesn’t have a date either.
At least we would know because we can see it on the block chain that my
parents’ deed must have existed in order to create that unique cryptographic
hash two years ago. Then we can say okay, because we know yours is two years
old, this one that doesn’t even have a date, we’re just going to ignore it.
This is what a judge does when we’re talking about transferring property. They
look at all the additional of when something existed or when something didn’t.
And they look at the statue for the local jurisdiction which is either a race
statute or a race notice statute. Like the first person to get to the county
courthouse or the first person to actually know that somebody else had
previously purchased it. And the judge then has to make a choice. So right now
it’s only useful so much as a way of proving that a document existed at a
certain time. Although that has implications for say the rules of evidence, of
heresy. These sorts of things. These tools are already
becoming useful. They’ll be much more useful when we have a block chain that as
Aaron said will be a dedicated block chain possibly. Or maybe it would be a way
of interacting with the Bitcoin block chain. That is purpose-built to actually
create authoritative records. All the judge would need to do is say in this
jurisdiction, we recognize this decentralized block chain as the way of
authoritative or declaring ownership. This makes the judge’s job very easy. As
he can look at it and say this happened, this happened, and this happened.
Denise: Okay. We’re already talking about some
privacy-related issues moving from our policy discussion around Bitcoin into
the privacy and security aspects of the technology. We have one other
privacy-related story we’re going to cover before we get out of here. So let’s
play the bumper, shall we? Warren, this is a good opportunity to consider how
the Europeans might relate to some of the issues we’ve been discussing here
today. And to more specifically hone in on the right to be forgotten and how
it’s impacting Google and others. But Google, specifically gets in the news a lot. As it tries to comply
with that law. Can you bring us up to speed a bit?
Warren: Sure, so Google actually released a report, I
think it was today, very recently at least, just sort of detailing basic facts
and figures on its right to be forgotten requests under EU Data Protection Law.
There’s a recent high court ruling in the EU. Basically the EU court said, as
many of your listeners are probably aware, that a person has the right
effectively to be able to tell a search engine or similar websites to stop
linking to particular content. To effectively get rid of that record where
there is a sufficient balance in favor of the privacy rights of the individual
versus the free speech right of actually having that content up there. So what
Google’s had to do as a result is sort of implement basically something like a DMCA take-down system for these right to be
forgotten requests. So they’ve released some data just now, sort of detailing
some of those things. I think they got something like just under 145,000
different requests from people who are making personal data requests requesting
that based on their rights under EU law, Google has to pull down basically
links that come up when you Google so and so’s name in combination with certain
other search terms that might pull up something that’s embarrassing and no
longer viewed as relevant under EU law. So I linked to that article. I thought
it was pretty interesting also to compare that with an article that Jeffrey
Tubin had written for the New Yorker that sort of broke down the disparity
between U.S. law and EU law in this area. Because obviously
in the U.S. we have the first amendment. Make it really, really
difficult to implement a regime like this. I love that title: the solace of
oblivion. Which is somewhat dark. It’s a very good
read. It’s also very interesting; it starts with the story of this tragic
incident of a father who lost his daughter. Then actually the photographs of
the death scene wound up leaking on the internet and he feels that he has
really no control over those photographs. And the argument is sort of
contrasting with the EU where theoretically at least-and this isn’t actually
even necessarily true under EU law-he might have the right to be able to go to
Google and say I don’t own the copyright on these photographs. So I can’t take
them down under the copyright law. But if there’s a personal data protection
right then I can tell this search engine or the center intermediary to stop
linking to them. Or I can ask them to get rid of the particular content just
because it is relevant and effectively offensive to these privacy rights. So
it’s just an interesting story from my perspective. It’s clearly different
regulatory regimes interacting with the technology of the web. And sort of
creating these little effectively legal fiefdoms where you have different
regulations and different abilities as a citizen in one state versus a citizen
in another. So I just found that one to be a pretty interesting story. And I
think it’s going to be important as we keep going forward under these regimes.
Denise: Well now that I’ve got block chain on the brain,
I’m wondering if there is any way block chain technology can help Google out in
trying to comply with these requests. But I suppose that would require Google
to somehow put on the block chain every single web page that it has indexed.
And that it continues to index on an ongoing basis. And maybe that’s not
practical. Or maybe it is. Who knows? Anybody want to take a stab at that,
Aaron?
Aaron: I think that’s conceivable. I think you’ll start
to see block chain technology used in search. I really do. It’s just a good
database. Maybe Google would start to do that.
Denise: Martha Stewart would approve. It’s a good
database.
Peter: Maybe you could also transact with people in order
to get records taken down. Probably be hugely expensive to unilaterally
negotiate with every person who has a record of something you don’t want up
there. But I don’t know.
Aaron: One thing you might want to think about too, in
terms of Google, they’ve got to basically verify in some way. It would be ideal, I think they just do it now based on a certification.
But basically you’ve got to verify that this person has the rights to claim
that content being taken down. Maybe there’s a Bitcoin element right there.
That this person is who they say they are.
Peter: It all makes me so nervous because as you said, so
privacy is just the ultimate and good. Everybody has a different definition of
what they have should be private or not private. Or public. And the negotiations of that are difficult from an I’m
going to pay you to take stuff down level. And they’re very difficult from an I’m going to use government policy to take stuff down. Because that’s how we get all these legal fiefdoms. I’m sure
we’ll see people try these things with block chains. As we discussed, they’re
very powerful. I can’t imagine an implementation that would achieve anything
like universal ability to take down all versions of a thing. These machines
just really weren’t built for that. And I think they’re fighting history when
they try to really aggressively enforce something like the right to be
forgotten.
Denise: Yep, excellent point. Alright, well we’re going to
get out of here but not before we give our tip and resource of the week. Our
tip of the week this week is real simple. It’s hack
the law. If you are listening to this show, it’s because you’re either a lawyer
or a technologist, or someone who is interested in technology who is also
interested in the intersection of those two areas: law and technology. And how they can battle with each other sometimes. And help
to negotiate those waters. So get involved if you are one of those people. If
you’re looking for more information about legal hacking, there’s a really nice
by Ed Sone at Above the Law, called How to Hack the Law according to Morpheus.
And the title refers to the fact that Ed Sone asked Phil Weiss, the founder of
Legal Hackers-one of the founders-if Legal Hackers was a character in the
Matrix, who would they be. He said oh Morpheus, no doubt. So that’s sort of
sets things up nicely. And there are already formalized legal hacker groups as
we were talking about in New York, D.C., also Los Angeles. NC, that’s North
Carolina, Warren?
Warren: Yep.
Denise: Yep. And also Stockholm. So obviously there’s a lot of the world that still needs to get the memo on
this. And if you’re someone in one of those non-represented areas, then this is
a great opportunity for you to get involved. Always look at how we can make law
and policy work more nicely together. And Warren, you guys are doing a great
job at doing that.
Warren: Thank you. And definitely there’s a lot of other groups out there, too. There’s a lot of interest in law and
technology right now. It’s very cool. There’s just so much ground-swell of
general interest. And people who want to, like you said, hack the law, and find
ways to make it work in ways that haven’t really been typical or possible
beforehand.
Denise: That’s absolutely true. We try to do it, as you
mention here every week. Our resource for you this week is given to us by
Peter. It’s an article called What Smart Contracts Need to Learn. It’s at
Lawbitrage. Peter, can you tell us a bit about this and why it’s a great
resource?
Peter: Yea, so that’s from Homan Shidab who’s at New York Law School. I think it’s a very sharp and
reasonable take on smart contracts. You’ll find some people out there who are
true evangelists who are saying we’re going to do everything on the block
chain. It’s going to be amazing. The singularity is near, etcetera. And Homan’s
tone is very careful, neutral, considering the technology. He lays it out in
some detail for you to see. And he also goes through what he thinks are the
limitations. Especially that sort of squishy human element
that no matter what, we’re always going to be contracting between two people. You’re going to need lawyers to be negotiators. And that’s just, this is great synergy with Warren and Legal Hack and what Aaron’s doing with
his clinic at Cardozo. We really need to be pairing young lawyers and not like
the kind of lawyers that are out here in D.C. I mean some of them, but not the
ones that are like marching up to Capitol Hill every day. The ones that are in
the local county courthouse or just trying to make contracts between people and
make property deals happen. Those nuts and bolts lawyers that are down in the
boiler room of the ship shoveling coal, those are the ones that are going to
really benefit from this technology. And if our society can organize itself
better and more cheaply by giving those people the technological tools to do
their job more authoritatively and better, it’s going to be a wild ride.
Denise: Learn to code and definitely make yourself heard. If you’re a consumer and not a lawyer or a
coder, because goodness knows anybody who’s been involved with a car
transaction or real estate transaction knows that our contracting process as it
exists today is not exactly state of the art. And it’s a big old pain. So we do
need to make things work securely and well. And we may have some of the secure down
now. But the well and streamline part definitely has a ways to go. So make your
voice heard on that front. And thanks, Peter for the pointer to that. And thank
you all so much for joining me today on This Week in Law. It’s been a really
fascinating show. I’ve learned a bunch. I’ve got even more I want to go
research and learn even more about. So Warren Allen, thank you so much for
joining us again. It’s great to have you back on the show.
Warren: It’s awesome to be back, Denise. Thank you so much
for having me! It’s really cool every time.
Denise: It’s wonderful to have you. And are there any… I
know we just had a D.C. legal hackers meet up. And
then there was something about, I forget. It had code in the name.
Aaron: Code the deal, yea.
Denise: Code the deal. Exactly about smart contracts,
right?
Aaron: Well it was just transactional law in general. We
had gotten a bunch of people again in a room, had a legal hackathon where we
want to put 16 different projects and actually presented. And we gave some great
cash prizes to three really great projects. And really everything that we wound
up seeing submitted was very cool. And made us think. The winner wound up being
a program called Red Line. They designed a prototype for effectively a better
way of doing the whole Red Line contract process that we all know and love so
much. But doing it in a simpler way where you have live collaboration, you can
screen out comments so that you can communicate internally on one side. And
your opposition can communicate on the other side. So it was a very cool
project. Again, Phil Weiss, who is the founder of Legal
Hackers. I’m one of the organizers and he is too. But we both were there
from the beginning pretty much. But he deserves the credit for coming up with
the idea in the first place. And he was really a lead on this too, working with
Nicks and Peabody, the law firm. And Aaron Yold there. They put this event together. We helped give a lot of support but it was really
a very impressive event that wound up happening. Oh and then I should also
mention that we have got an upcoming event on October 23 at CT in New York.
That’s going to be legal tech demo night. So lots of legal
tech happening in the city.
Denise: Thank you so much, Aaron. And keep up the great
work. Aaron, thank you so much for lighting the fire under me
to do this show today. I’m so glad that we’ve gotten into these topics.
There’s obviously a lot more to unpack but at least we touched on them.
Aaron: And thank you very much. I really wanted to thank
you for having me and everybody else and bringing attention to this important
topic. We’ve also at Cardozo, we’re bringing
superintendent of the Department of Financial Services to the school. And he’s
going to be talking about the bit license and we’re going to be talking about
the s’more. I can post a link and we’re live streaming it so anybody in New
York or anywhere else can view it! We have a great all-star panel that’s going
to follow up his talk to continue this discussion.
Denise: Should people go to the tech startup clinic to go
to that link when you do live stream it?
David: I’ll post it in IRC and maybe to Delicious,
too.
Denise: Yes, just as long as you put it into IRC, I can
pick it up from there. And I’ll make sure it gets into our discussion notes for
this show. Peter, it’s been really thrilling to meet you. Tell us a bit about
Coin Center. I know it’s just founded last month, correct?
Peter: Yea, me and Jerry. We’re pretty fresh-faced a
couple other people who are in this space like the Bitcoin foundation; we’re
not associated with them but there’s certainly so much work to be done that
we’re happy to be a resource for educators. I mean an educator for policy makers
and a resource for policy makers. And we’ve got a long and hopefully prosperous
road of law and crypto currency ahead of us that we’re just going to hope to
uncover. As I’ve said before, the internet in 95 is a good metaphor. So
hopefully we can help the community repeat some of the successes of internet
policy and avoid some of the pitfalls when it comes to crypto-currencies.
Denise: Good for you. It’s definitely a necessary role so
thanks so much for doing it and for joining us today. I’ve been thrilled to
chat with all of you. Thrilled that all of you listening or
viewing can join us as well. You can catch the show every Friday. It
starts at 11:00 Pacific, 1800 UTC. So you know, late morning or early afternoon
depending on where you are in the U.S. Or if you’re international, we’re
thrilled to have you join us too. If you missed this show live or you can’t
make it live every week-that doesn’t matter-we have all our shows out there on
demand for you in various venues at twit.tv/twil. That’s our main page. You can
find us on YouTube. We’re This Week in Law there. We’re on iTunes and on the
Roku or wherever else you like to pick up. We’re there for you. And also we’re
there on the social networks as well. Great way to get in
touch between shows. I’m D Howell on Twitter. The show has a Facebook
page and also a Google plus page. If you have a little bit more to say, those
are good places to do it. Also you can email me. I’m denise@twit.tv, great way to get in touch and let us know. If
you’ve thought of other applications for the block chain, and as a result of
listening to this show, let us know. What other topics that you think are right
in our sweet spot that we may have just blown by up to this point. Because I
love hearing about that and fixing it. And continuing to
monitor things that are important as they unfold. So let us know what’s
on your radar and we’ll put it on yours. What else should I tell you? I think
that’s about it. We’ve done a great show today. We hope you’ve enjoyed it and
we’ll see you next time on This Week in Law! Take care.