Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2024

Publication Title

Nebraska Law Review

Keywords

new technologies, private bargaining, Bitcoin, Ethereum

Abstract

When do new technologies require changes in the law? Judge Easterbrook argued in 1996 that there is no more need for a "Law of Cyberspace" than there ever was for a "Law of the Horse." Rather, existing laws spanning multiple fields are often sufficient to cover niche factual applications and even new technological change. The same is true now for "The Law of Blockchain." Nonetheless, blockchain marketplace participants lack any cohesive, useful analysis to tum to that is neutral in outcome and performs a comprehensive analysis spanning the multitude of laws affecting the whole ecosystem. We might not need a "Law of Blockchain," yet this article hopes to shed light on the wide scope of existing laws that apply to this new technological era. This article uses legal issues in blockchain to explain when new technology requires new law. Typically, new law is not needed unless existing law fails to provide the rights to assist private bargaining, to yield outcomes contrary to current policy goals, or to address a new type or degree of harm.

Assets on the blockchain have ballooned to billions of dollars, stored everywhere from Bitcoin and Ethereum, to Bored Ape Yacht Club and Lazy Lion NFTs, to new coins, decentralized finance, and play-to-earn gaming, with frequent booms and frequent busts. Despite this, regulators are only just catching up to the complexities of "Web 3.0" and, for many, it can feel like a Wild West. Prospectors, shills, and fraudsters abound, as do innovative companies and community projects. This article hopes to inform Web 3.0 founders, creators, and lawmakers of newly emerging legal questions in securities laws, intellectual property, advertising, and more.

This Article can present only one snapshot in time, and indeed the application of existing laws to blockchain and other new technologies will be clarified further by the time this is published. Nonetheless, this Article will hopefully provide a useful framework for how to approach new technology that relies on sound principles of decades-old legal schemes, not the pursuit of a "Law of Blockchain." New applications of old law can shift and define its edges, but adherence to first principles often clarifies what can seem like an uncertain legal landscape.

Volume

102

Issue

4

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