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“Code is Law” Explores Moral Quandry Behind Crypto Hacks

“A world where ‘the market’ runs free and the ‘evil’ of government is defeated would be, for them, a world of perfect freedom.” — Lawrence Lessig, Code: Version 2.0

Recently, I got the chance to watch a preview of James Craig’s upcoming documentary “Code is Law.” The film, which debuts on Oct. 21 on Apple TV+, Amazon Prime Video, and YouTube Movies, tells two distinct but related stories of crypto hacks: the people involved and the ethos of the perpetrators.

Its position is clear, but the question deserves a deeper investigation. If code is not law, should it be?

After the 2014 Mt. Gox hack, the first hack explored in “Code is Law,” the DAO hack is probably the most famous in crypto’s history. The DAO was the first decentralized autonomous organization, becoming an eponym in the process. In 2016, when Ethereum was still young, it was one of the first decentralized applications to gain traction.

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The film looks at hackers and those standing up to them. Source: Code is Law

The story follows founder Griff Green’s perspective as the early instantiation of decentralized governance rises, raises $160 million and then, at once, falls victim to a devastating hack.

The film uses the human angle to frame a debate that was prevalent at the time. When an attacker takes money from a smart contract, relying on the contract’s internal logic to obtain tokens outside of the creator’s intention, is that wrong? Should the attacker be censured, legally or otherwise, or is this simply fair play?

The cycle repeats in the early 2020s, with an examination of a lesser-known hack of Indexed Finance. The exploit was allegedly perpetrated by an attacker alternatively named Umbril Upsilon and Zeta Zeros, who would eventually be identified as the teenager Andean Medjedovic.

Related: Who is Andean Medjedovic, the alleged $48M KyberSwap hacker?

The film uses Medjedovic as a cipher for the idea that code is law. His worldview, portrayed as puerile, is anarchistic and brutal. “If I could take it, I had the right to.”

In the film, this is an argument based on moral intuition alone, without a principled basis and defended only by tautology. None of the ideas’ advocates make the normative case for why code should be law, but there must be an instrumental basis for this philosophy beyond moralism.

A century ends and code is law

The phrase “code is law” is generally attributed to the academic Lawrence Lessig. The first chapter in his 1999 book “Code: And Other Laws of Cyberspace” is titled “Code is Law” and draws an analogy between the power vacuums percolating in Eastern Europe at the time (someone should check in on that) and the internet.

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Lessig’s book looks at code as a form of regulation. Source: Amazon

People have always looked to frontiers for freedom. That is because societies are, fundamentally, structures that organize violence to contain the desires of individuals in favor of the priorities of those in power. Generally, this has at least some pro-social qualities: Police have a privileged role as monopolists of violence so that we can buy deodorant at Walgreens without ringing a bell for an attendant. But that does not change what it is.

At the frontier, where these structures haven’t been established yet, strong individuals can maximally exploit that strength to dominate others. That is freedom to those who want that or otherwise possess heterodox views and wish to exercise them away from propriety’s watchful eyes.

And in this, the moral origin of freedom is revealed. Freedom is not a positive quality that can be gained in a vacuum; it is the absence of a negative. The removal of a restraint of any kind is an increase in freedom. And so, for oddballs and sociopaths, a complete absence of government authority, like that which existed in cyberspace in 1999 or decentralized finance in 2016, may be desirable.

These are the advocates now of a code-is-law ethos, those who think freedom from restraint will advantage them precisely because it is asymmetric. They disproportionately wish to pursue activities that society censures, so a less powerful social conscience disproportionately benefits them.

But Lessig’s point was the opposite:

“We can build, or architect, or code cyberspace to protect values that we believe are fundamental. Or we can build, or architect, or code cyberspace to allow those values to disappear. There is no middle ground. There is no choice that does not include some kind of building. Code is never found; it is only ever made, and only ever made by us.”

Code, in this construction, is not necessarily a removal of negative restraint but is instead just another instance of regulation, broadly construed. A restraint, manifested differently, that poses the same questions as any other form of restraint.

The problem

There are two core problems, though, that prevent code from being effective law in even the generous Lessig form. 

The first, as is highlighted in Craig’s film, is that…

cointelegraph.com

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