R. A. Hettinga on Mon, 25 Mar 2002 11:30:26 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> GeoCap: Nietzsche vs. Shakespeare, Tim May vs. Lawrence Lessig, and the definition of actual property in cypherspace (was Re: Henry VI and Lawyer-Killing) |
[orig To: cypherpunks@lne.com, dcsb@ai.mit.edu, Digital Bearer Settlement List <dbs@philodox.com>, dcsb@ai.mit.edu, cryptography@wasabisystems.com, cyberia-l@listserv.aol.com, fork@xent.com, e$@vmeng.com, mac-crypto@vmeng.com, nettime@bbs.thing.net, Irregulars@tb.tf ] -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- "Are you a GOD???" "No..." "Then you DIE!!!" -- Zool talking to Venckman "Ghostbusters" Geodesic Capital Nietzsche vs. Shakespeare, Tim May vs. Lawrence Lessig, and the Definition of Actual Property in Cypherspace Robert Hettinga 3/24/02 Boston, Massachusetts At 1:42 PM -0800 on 3/24/02, Tim May wrote: > "First, we separate the lawyers into three categories: those who > can pay compensation for their crimes and can enter other fields, > those who should kill immediately for their crimes, and, last but > not least, those who must be tortured for their crimes and then > killed." > > My guess is that nearly all lawyers fall into the third category. > > The Earl was far too kind to them. I suppose I would say the the above more about *legislators*, than I would *litigators*, :-), though it probably won't come to that, no matter how much wishful thinking some might have about physical solutions to the paradoxically *logical* problem of the modern infestation, for lack of a better word, of the internet with intellectual property lawyers, and the like. Personally, I agree with David Friedman about lawyers. He says that private law -- the negotiation and dispute of commercial agreements struck between private parties -- is a good thing. To me, personally, I think that force monopoly as practiced by the modern nation-state, "democratic" or not, is as abhorrent as organized religion was to Voltaire. Or to Nietzsche, Tim May's favorite philosopher, or at least the one he quotes the most on the cypherpunks list network. Friedman himself points to "dark-age" Iceland as an example of a perfectly functional anarchy, a successful society operating functionally in the absence of "public" law. At the turn of the second millennium in Iceland, and in most of the Norse world, from Labrador, Iceland, Ireland and "Danelaw" Britain, all along non-tribal top of Eurasia to the edge of central Asia and the backdoor of Byzantium itself, murder was a tort. Everyone had a head-price, and if someone was killed and their head-price wasn't paid to that person's family (and after the family hired a judge who said so, of course), an appropriately adjudged murderer could be killed without penalty. Such a person would, literally, become an outlaw, outside the tort law, and, more important, the economics, governing the situation. In Iceland, then, private law preceded the state, as it probably always has. And, places like Iceland, where inhabitants had more or less equal recourse to markets for force, prove it is possible to live without force monopoly and still have law for quite a long time, at least until resources diminish to such an extent that a foreign power can invade, or engineer an non-violent annexation, as a Scandinavian king did to Iceland for most of the late second millennium. There have been discussions about whether population density requires more law, causes the creation of states, and so on, but we should note that some of the functionally, if not officially, freest places in the world have had the highest population densities, even officially, like Hong Kong was, before the Chinese resumed control and recently started to legislate economics there like they do on the mainland. Even without official sanction, or, more properly in spite of it, "City Air Breathes Free", as the medieval saying goes. All neo-Jeffersonian agrarian-utopia fantasies -- and rural misperceptions of urban life -- aside, the reason so many laws and regulations are promulgated in cities is because huge amounts of those official controls are more honored in the breech than in any observance thereof. Even if that causes H.L. Mencken's "bluenoses and busybodies", people with more money, time -- and of course greed -- than sense, to promulgate more laws and rules to "solve" a "problem", in the same way that more sin causes religious believers to pray more, even when the efficacy of prayer for physical redress is an empirically questionable exercise, it doesn't change things much, unless people residing in a given urban area decide to change themselves anyway. In the same vein, I think that from the very foundation of his assertion that *political* intention causes small-c "code", and not actual physics and economics, Lawrence Lessig has completely the wrong end of the internet "governance" stick, just like anyone who thinks that politics is caused by ethics instead of economics is grabbing a completely different stick entirely. :-). I think we'll see that, over time, the logical mechanism of software will, in fact, eventually subsume all but the most theatrical applications of public law, and eventually of private law as well, just as all but the most theatrical aspects of chivalry and liturgy were subsumed by modern military, law and political theory. However, unlike most, I wouldn't want to move into that particular castle in the air just yet, at least until technologists actually build it, though I keep using the market, meaning the available code-base, to kick the castle's door every once in a while just to see if it's there yet. In the case of internet bearer transactions, for instance, we're pretty close, I think. Most gold-transaction systems are securities depositories by another name, and most have shopping cart interfaces which can be used in conjunction with mints like Ben Laurie's Wagner-blinding lucre library. Even the ATM networks keep sprouting more and more "roots" into the the financial aquifer that internet bearer finance could be come. The FSTC, the Financial Services Technology Consortium has prototypes for ATM-based web access and payment that their member banks could use right now. Even PayPal, which pays interest on account balances makes a decent depository/custodian for an internet bearer instrument reserve account, or it will once someone does it on some other book-entry internet value-store/transaction system. And, as Tim May notes, technologies like blind signatures and strongly encrypted information on ubiquitous internetworks allow the creation of an extra-legal kind of "place", an actual *thing*. That "thing" is, in fact, property, property which can be transferred exclusive of, orthogonal to, the law. This idea of actual, tangible boundries, as real as those defined by law and upheld by a monopolistic force, but existing in what should be just an imagined space in a mere communication medium, is a brilliant discovery. And, it is, of course, the very core of Tim May's ideas about Crypto-Anarchy. No one, in considerably more than a decade of his promoting the idea on the net and discussing it in places like cypherpunks and elsewhere, has pointed to a prior claim on any idea even remotely approaching Cryto-Anarchy in it's originality. And it is the idea of Crypto-Anarchy, whether anyone knows about it or not, that makes Tim May probably the most influential person on the net today. Certainly most people *don't* know that, in the same way that Nietzsche or Wagner immediately influenced the philosophical and political, or the musical and artistic thinking of their time. And they continue to influence us today. Most modern western ethics, especially political "science", is derivative of Nietzsche's, for instance, and most big-budget movie scores, like those of John Williams, are Wagnerian in design with leitmotifs and so on; the idea of a darkened house and a lit stage is even Wagner's, for instance. People like Wagner and Nietzsche hold their influence regardless of how personally abhorrent and obnoxious some of their other opinions on various contemporaneous issues were -- not unlike Mr. May's quite literally theatrical exhortation above, for instance which is, obviously, pure Nietzsche, and not, has been noted, Shakespeare. :-). So, getting back to lawyers and ridding ourselves of same, if something is encrypted, whether it's streaming or static information, whether it's operating control of machinery or of a financial asset, or whether it's access to or control of physical property, it's safe to argue that if I control the decryption of that "thing", to make it immediately useful to me, it becomes, in fact, my *property*, to do with what I want -- completely, and, more important, physically exclusive of any legal claim the state may make on my behavior, up to, and including selling a copy of information in my encrypted control. That kind of control of property, the ex-nihilo creation of *private* property, as any microeconomist will tell you, is the fundamental requirement of any working economy. Put another way, strong cryptography, and financial cryptography protocols in particular, allow me to control increasingly valuable property, like extremely recent information and, better, financial assets, and to do so using considerably less force than it costs me to call a cop and send someone to jail if they stole, say, my wallet, or, better, lied to me about the safety of my money in their bank. At the very least, strong financial cryptography allows me to use cheap enough force to control an asset without dispute from others because they can't know what I have, up to, and paradoxically including, the assets I use in the free-market purchase of physical force itself -- in, obviously the smallest amount economically necessarily to keep me unencumbered from the physical encroachment of others. So, if such a given good is property, then it has value, and it can be traded for other property of like value. Just like property in meatspace, this new private digital property be negotiated for, either by a price-discovery auction, or by software convention and protocol (the way that TCP/IP avoids packet collision or that a blinding protocol prevents double spending), or negotiated by argument of hired verbal adversaries, as we do with lawyers and judges in private law now. Private law which, again, will happen less and less as reduced transaction cost increases the ability to strike economic bargains, subsuming transfer-pricing -- or the *calculation* of asset value instead of discovering it -- which is at the very heart of most modern, and legitimate, legal property disputes to begin with. So, I suppose that, rather than killing the all the lawyers, :-), people who do strong cryptography on the internet are doing something even better, to my mind. They're actually making the legal professions unprofitable. If we must thump our chests like ubermenschen, cypherpunks are actually just threatening to starve lawyers, and their children, into submission. "Forcing" them, economically, to get real jobs and leave the rest of us alone... :-). Cheers, RAH -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP 7.0 iQEVAwUBPJ6JCsUCGwxmWcHhAQHJ2wgAn3mCpLbjLHYdAbF72/7C7pQs0Nc6biTA uy3Cj1hpWor37x2Rz9jKdO07830u/jbmnYkgF/2J6F3hbl9mQGfu/5xDNWVgulj1 qOJFw2a794/OXcINHXOOkYMPDIc+Uwu3bksW2fV+g7vmJwN37q0oKUSSKWTT2B+s G9gyoAsdgTKiwZbq9m6cYwbnqN99iU9HBVcGBDCOgoEn0mpGXH4erIFJ4GPBYtcN ufxRuUo5W/TL+QG3WtWsCzNavG0uEMjr8lGv961DHDE+WzaqsRG5B9a4Pj8zhfOB IdM2ECt6hByulcxzeuDDyPoe6hMtuvEYI+Z+DfJMRmOxuYi99AvM4Q== =ICaT -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- ----------------- R. A. Hettinga <mailto: rah@ibuc.com> The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/> 44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA The IBUC Symposium on Geodesic Capital April 3-4, 2002, The Downtown Harvard Club, Boston <mailto: rah@ibuc.com> for details... "The direct use of physical force is so poor a solution to the problem of limited resources that it is commonly employed only by small children and great nations." -- David Friedman, _The_Machinery_of_Freedom_ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net