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I came into Project Lysistrata with a hypothesis that I needed to be able to connect risk mitigation and growth cycles in fluid, provable ways to sustain any kind of crypto-based project for the long game. Read More …
The Evolution of Law in the Digital Age
I came into Project Lysistrata with a hypothesis that I needed to be able to connect risk mitigation and growth cycles in fluid, provable ways to sustain any kind of crypto-based project for the long game. Read More …
Workflow. It’s not a concept they teach in law school. Workflow is a process lawyers tend to keep hidden, in part for good reason: if we are going to solve confidential problems, we need to work in privacy. In law Read More …
We are starting to get 2017 predictions in the blockchain space, but 2016 raised as many questions as it answered. 2016 showed that blockchain smart contract technology is fit for purpose as improved legal/financial infrastructure, but it also showed that Read More …
I’m often asked what law schools can do to change the current dynamic of “too many lawyers for the old legal world, not enough lawyers for the new.” It comes down to math, and the application of computational logic to Read More …
The summer of 2016 saw the rise of the legal engineer in software ecosystems. From my own work at Monax Industries on distributed ecosystems solutions using blockchain smart contracts to the continued calls for innovation in law practice through technology, Read More …
I’m often asked what drove a mid-career lawyer to make the switch from litigation to legal engineering blockchain-based systems. I’ve usually given the commerce-driven story: I studied the thriving businesses around me for what they had in common and found Read More …
In recent weeks, governance issues are a primary concern for the Ethereum community as it deals with how to build smart contracts that are useful as well as innovative. I am convinced of the viability of the Ethereum concept, if Read More …
It’s cicada season in the neighborhood forests of fair Raleigh. I’ve always been fascinated by cicadas, their shrill song, the creepy exoskeletons left on trees and curbs. I used to collect those little split-back beetle shells for chasing the squeamish. Read More …
An introduction to smart contracts for the digital non-native. The Hash. Computers work because almost any kind of information can be transformed into a string of zeroes and ones called binary code. Once data has been reduced to binary code, Read More …
I’ve had my head down in the nuts and bolts of development for the past few weeks, coming up the learning curve one process at a time. The power of development tools, most of them collaborative, free and open source, Read More …