"Code is Law", as @lessig famously said. But for a decade now, people like myself, @balajis, @paulmromer and Tom Bell have been pointing out that Law is Code too: laws are lists of procedural instructions executed by judges and arbitrators as the CPUs.
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We amend laws like we patch code; we comment on them, copy them, propose rewrites in the form of Model Codes, have APIs like the UCC (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Commercial_Code …), even cross-language APIs (treaties), and we search for opinions on
@LexisNexis just like usage examples on@github.1 reply 4 retweets 14 likesShow this thread -
Patri Friedman Retweeted Nick Szabo ⚡️
I'm not saying laws are exactly like code or that human law is superior to machine law - I'm sympathetic to
@NickSzabo4's eloquent critiques of "human-interpreted wet code" (https://twitter.com/NickSzabo4/status/1001670124175163392 …). But there's enough similarity to mine coding practices for legal insights.Patri Friedman added,
Nick Szabo ⚡️ @NickSzabo4Great thread about how much EOS depends on a naively drafted "constitution", human-interpreted wet code. As a result EOS will be labor-intensive, permissioned, jurisdictionally biased, and will have poor social scalability. https://twitter.com/panekkkk/status/1001627755736322048 …1 reply 2 retweets 17 likesShow this thread -
So I feel strongly that law should be more fully open-sourced: modularized, forkable, diffable, OSS licensed, kept in searchable repositories along with open (not gated) databases of rulings, and incorporated via reference into city, county, province, and country codes.
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San Francisco voters should be able to propose a ballot initiative to adopt Houston's pro-housing growth codes v 2.3, along with specified patch us-ca-2018-11.01 to adapt the codes to match the "API" of the other city & county codes & the CA state constitution.
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Replying to @patrissimo
I understand the enthusiasm, but I'm not sure the latest few years of election experience in UK and US indicates that we are ready for that kind of detailed direct democracy tbh.
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The ballot proposition was just meant as an example. The main idea here is not greater direct democracy, it's upgrading the technology around legal systems using our tools & concepts from software. Laws are already partly modular, partly open-source, etc. - let's ramp that up!
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