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@baseddesigner.eth
if we want to regulate crypto, would we want to go the ancient way and write laws on paper? or would we want it to be open, simple - digital and based on smart contracts / code? currently you need lawyers to understand or rather outsource law understanding to them to do pretty much anything with coded law you could just run a query against a token contract or something, same thing dexscreener has with tokensniffer
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@baseddesigner.eth
so combining all of the tools like tokensniffer into a single "regulatory" or what we all agree is making sense and integrate into our products to make it safer for people onchain
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@baseddesigner.eth
then if we had law updates done similarly as code updates, which makes a lot of sense if you think about it - github for laws where you can review each line and have multiple stakeholders to approve
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@baseddesigner.eth
for example this issue could've solved what I'm having right now with my expired residency, they could just include another line to accept cases like mine because otherwise it doesn't make any sense and is descriminative towards people like me with passports issued outside of EU
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Nelson M. Rosario
@nelsonmrosario
Washington DC started down this path in 2018 and there has been lots of research into making the law programmatic for about 20 years https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2018/11/how-i-changed-the-law-with-a-github-pull-request/
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