
No Good Deed Goes Unpunished: How to (Almost) Get Disbarred
TLDR; IT'S MY FAULT BUT: In January 2017, I moved to WV because my ex-fiancé got into PA school. I got a job at the Public Defender's office because in early 2017, I wasn't convinced crypto+securities law was a successful business model, especially in WV. I got my NY bar application to apply to the WV bar and found out an addendum I sent in 2011 wasn't included. I filed a self-report bar complaint saying the file was missing an important document. The investigation ended in 2018, nothing for four years, then one day I got a call from the Bar saying they were proceeding with the case that was now over five years old. Cool. They wanted to disbar me or have me lie and say I never turned it in. I wasn't going to do that. We had an evidentiary hearing and learned NO NY LAWYER has a background check. We moved forward after the evidentiary judge claimed my story didn't make sense (Why would I email myself the document? Because I was a broke LLM student with no printer, so I had to email it to myself to print off at the UB law library). Now to judgment day, a 15-minute hearing four hours each way from me in Albany. I argued the law and facts - why the hell would I turn myself in if I lied? It makes no sense. Why would I lie when I beat the DUI charge with a dismissal from the elected District Attorney? What? Aren't there attorney background checks that would have caught this as a clerical error in 2011?! 3-2 decision, one year suspension. Dissenters wanted public censure and dismissal.

AI + Data + (REDACTED) = PROFIT
Juicy redacted bits inside.

“Proof” We Live in a Simulation: Introducing Fundamental Code Theory
TL;DR: You don't get the good answers by looking at the back of the book this time. Sure, you could click on the link below, but what fun would that ...
<100 subscribers

No Good Deed Goes Unpunished: How to (Almost) Get Disbarred
TLDR; IT'S MY FAULT BUT: In January 2017, I moved to WV because my ex-fiancé got into PA school. I got a job at the Public Defender's office because in early 2017, I wasn't convinced crypto+securities law was a successful business model, especially in WV. I got my NY bar application to apply to the WV bar and found out an addendum I sent in 2011 wasn't included. I filed a self-report bar complaint saying the file was missing an important document. The investigation ended in 2018, nothing for four years, then one day I got a call from the Bar saying they were proceeding with the case that was now over five years old. Cool. They wanted to disbar me or have me lie and say I never turned it in. I wasn't going to do that. We had an evidentiary hearing and learned NO NY LAWYER has a background check. We moved forward after the evidentiary judge claimed my story didn't make sense (Why would I email myself the document? Because I was a broke LLM student with no printer, so I had to email it to myself to print off at the UB law library). Now to judgment day, a 15-minute hearing four hours each way from me in Albany. I argued the law and facts - why the hell would I turn myself in if I lied? It makes no sense. Why would I lie when I beat the DUI charge with a dismissal from the elected District Attorney? What? Aren't there attorney background checks that would have caught this as a clerical error in 2011?! 3-2 decision, one year suspension. Dissenters wanted public censure and dismissal.

AI + Data + (REDACTED) = PROFIT
Juicy redacted bits inside.

“Proof” We Live in a Simulation: Introducing Fundamental Code Theory
TL;DR: You don't get the good answers by looking at the back of the book this time. Sure, you could click on the link below, but what fun would that ...
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Full disclosure: I hold a vested financial interest in BlockLock as a strategic advisor, and I am deeply committed to seeing this technology become mainstream for reasons beyond what I can fully express here. Over the years, I've lost too many individuals who no longer walk this Earth, and they didn’t have a reliable way to pass on their crypto to loved ones before their departure.
This is my “No BS” new form of articles where I cut the fluff because no one has time for that.

Kimberly “Sweet Brown” Wilkins **
If you've been in web3 long enough you've f'ed up and interacted with a bad contract. Whether you lost your assets or your ass is another matter altogether but it's happened to all of us. Even the best of us. If they haven't, it's because they are lying or don't degen enough.
So when John Berry of BlockLock reached out I was keen for the call. He explained that they figured out how to stop wallet transactions from occurring and place limits on a wallet while being outside of the wallet. Let me say that again to make it clear, the bad actors can get into your wallet but because of this technology they cannot get anything more than you’ve authorized out. Yep. It's like having someone break into your house but unable to steal all your shit because your house has a magic system that only lets you or the thief remove what you've already pre-allowed.
Absolute magic. Definitely would have saved me a time or three. Class of late 2016. ;)
The beauty is BlockLock accomplishes this without changing how your wallet works - no need to migrate assets or learn complex new security protocols.
Now think about it for you estate and trust attorneys whose jobs are being quite literally swooped up by AI and advanced Customer Relationship Managements (CRMs) with way nicer interfaces than your battle axe of a paralegal. Or those that have no idea how to get their clients' crypto like my friends in Web3 who have passed before their time with no will or way to access their shit. So dear estate and/or trust or family lawyer, if you want to be relevant again or you want to be the first into the forefront of the digital age, BlockLock is for you.
But is is also for:
(1) If you've lost assets and don't want it to happen again, BlockLock is for you.
(2) If you have keys but know damn sure your attorney and/or loved one(s) doesn't know what to do with them, BlockLock is for you.
(3) If you're a hedge fund, PE fund, ETF, custodian, or bank that wants another level of security to protect your client’s assets, BlockLock is for you.
(4) If you're a DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization), DUNA (Decentralized Unincorporated Nonprofit Association), and BORG (Blockchain Organized Recurring Group), BlockLock is for you.
(5) If you’re a foundation on a supported chain, BlockLock is definitely for you.
(6) If you’re a foundation on a non-supported, BlockLock may be able to provide protection for you. Reach out.

Good news, while almost all the technology is done, the patents and sexy front end isn't so you can invest by reaching out to John at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnberry/
**Please note Kimberly “Sweet Brown” Wilkins has beaten her addiction to drugs and I wish her all the best because as she said it best, “ain't nobody got time for that.” https://x.com/corduroying/status/848351735534034945?s=46
We have to build this now before we all have crypto horror story.
Full disclosure: I hold a vested financial interest in BlockLock as a strategic advisor, and I am deeply committed to seeing this technology become mainstream for reasons beyond what I can fully express here. Over the years, I've lost too many individuals who no longer walk this Earth, and they didn’t have a reliable way to pass on their crypto to loved ones before their departure.
This is my “No BS” new form of articles where I cut the fluff because no one has time for that.

Kimberly “Sweet Brown” Wilkins **
If you've been in web3 long enough you've f'ed up and interacted with a bad contract. Whether you lost your assets or your ass is another matter altogether but it's happened to all of us. Even the best of us. If they haven't, it's because they are lying or don't degen enough.
So when John Berry of BlockLock reached out I was keen for the call. He explained that they figured out how to stop wallet transactions from occurring and place limits on a wallet while being outside of the wallet. Let me say that again to make it clear, the bad actors can get into your wallet but because of this technology they cannot get anything more than you’ve authorized out. Yep. It's like having someone break into your house but unable to steal all your shit because your house has a magic system that only lets you or the thief remove what you've already pre-allowed.
Absolute magic. Definitely would have saved me a time or three. Class of late 2016. ;)
The beauty is BlockLock accomplishes this without changing how your wallet works - no need to migrate assets or learn complex new security protocols.
Now think about it for you estate and trust attorneys whose jobs are being quite literally swooped up by AI and advanced Customer Relationship Managements (CRMs) with way nicer interfaces than your battle axe of a paralegal. Or those that have no idea how to get their clients' crypto like my friends in Web3 who have passed before their time with no will or way to access their shit. So dear estate and/or trust or family lawyer, if you want to be relevant again or you want to be the first into the forefront of the digital age, BlockLock is for you.
But is is also for:
(1) If you've lost assets and don't want it to happen again, BlockLock is for you.
(2) If you have keys but know damn sure your attorney and/or loved one(s) doesn't know what to do with them, BlockLock is for you.
(3) If you're a hedge fund, PE fund, ETF, custodian, or bank that wants another level of security to protect your client’s assets, BlockLock is for you.
(4) If you're a DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization), DUNA (Decentralized Unincorporated Nonprofit Association), and BORG (Blockchain Organized Recurring Group), BlockLock is for you.
(5) If you’re a foundation on a supported chain, BlockLock is definitely for you.
(6) If you’re a foundation on a non-supported, BlockLock may be able to provide protection for you. Reach out.

Good news, while almost all the technology is done, the patents and sexy front end isn't so you can invest by reaching out to John at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnberry/
**Please note Kimberly “Sweet Brown” Wilkins has beaten her addiction to drugs and I wish her all the best because as she said it best, “ain't nobody got time for that.” https://x.com/corduroying/status/848351735534034945?s=46
We have to build this now before we all have crypto horror story.
1 comment
We've all done it: the dreaded "oops I interacted with the wrong smart contract and got drained." 😬 That's why I'm proud to advise BlockLock against what I see as adoption's #1 enemy. Check my latest NO BS article: https://paragraph.com/@dunsmoor.eth/no-bs-how-blocklock-will-save-your-assets