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All Smart Contracts Are Ambiguous

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  • Grimmelmann, James

    (Cornell University)

  • Library, Cornell

Abstract

Smart contracts are written in programming languages rather than in natural languages. This might seem to insulate them from ambiguity, because the meaning of a program is determined by technical facts rather than by social ones. It does not. Smart contracts can be ambiguous, too, because technical facts depend on socially determined ones. To give meaning to a computer program, a community of programmers and users must agree on the semantics of the programming language in which it is written. This is a social process, and a review of some famous controversies involving blockchains and smart contracts shows that it regularly creates serious ambiguities. In the most famous case, The DAO hack, more than $150 million in virtual currency turned on the contested semantics of a blockchain-based smart-contract programming language.

Suggested Citation

  • Grimmelmann, James & Library, Cornell, 2019. "All Smart Contracts Are Ambiguous," LawArXiv v37zd, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:lawarx:v37zd
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/v37zd
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    Cited by:

    1. Lauren Haaften-Schick & Amy Whitaker, 2022. "From the Artist’s Contract to the blockchain ledger: new forms of artists’ funding using equity and resale royalties," Journal of Cultural Economics, Springer;The Association for Cultural Economics International, vol. 46(2), pages 287-315, June.
    2. Ferreira, Agata, 2021. "Regulating smart contracts: Legal revolution or simply evolution?," Telecommunications Policy, Elsevier, vol. 45(2).

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