NFT Marketplaces: Aggregation, Centralisation & Individuation?
I have been thinking a lot recently about how NFT marketplaces will evolve, especially as it feels like every other deck I see is some form of marketplace. Then today I saw a debate between two very intelligent people in the space, whose opinions I have grown to respect. I wanted to share my thoughts (some of which are borrowed from them). I don’t currently have a conclusion but this is how I am viewing the different options and issues facing the NFT Marketplace space. Problem - There are SO ...
Defi Dives: Ribbon Protocol
Disclaimer I am a member of Ribbon DAO and use the protocol. None of what I say here should be taken as investment advice, this is simply an examination of how the platform works.I want to start doing some dives into Defi protocols and products. This can be as much a learning opportunity for me as you dear reader. It gives me a chance to break down topics into concepts easier to understand and examine for those of us who aren’t far right on the IQ bell curve (I know where I am located…hint it...
Sol Breakpoint 2021
First of all, let’s get the important stuff out of the way… GMMy fav piece of ‘merch’ all week 😂 thank you Slope & the dude walking around with these in his hair. I was lucky enough to attend Sol Breakpoint in Lisbon this year. I was there on a personal and professional basis both as an angel investor and to represent New Finance :)I wanted to write a bit about my experience, to share my views with others and also, for my own sake, document the event. To share some of the interesting compani...
Head of Strategy at NeoSwap Advisor @ New Finance VC, @ Redbrain Interested in learning. Art collector, investor, DeFi obsessed, golfer.
NFT Marketplaces: Aggregation, Centralisation & Individuation?
I have been thinking a lot recently about how NFT marketplaces will evolve, especially as it feels like every other deck I see is some form of marketplace. Then today I saw a debate between two very intelligent people in the space, whose opinions I have grown to respect. I wanted to share my thoughts (some of which are borrowed from them). I don’t currently have a conclusion but this is how I am viewing the different options and issues facing the NFT Marketplace space. Problem - There are SO ...
Defi Dives: Ribbon Protocol
Disclaimer I am a member of Ribbon DAO and use the protocol. None of what I say here should be taken as investment advice, this is simply an examination of how the platform works.I want to start doing some dives into Defi protocols and products. This can be as much a learning opportunity for me as you dear reader. It gives me a chance to break down topics into concepts easier to understand and examine for those of us who aren’t far right on the IQ bell curve (I know where I am located…hint it...
Sol Breakpoint 2021
First of all, let’s get the important stuff out of the way… GMMy fav piece of ‘merch’ all week 😂 thank you Slope & the dude walking around with these in his hair. I was lucky enough to attend Sol Breakpoint in Lisbon this year. I was there on a personal and professional basis both as an angel investor and to represent New Finance :)I wanted to write a bit about my experience, to share my views with others and also, for my own sake, document the event. To share some of the interesting compani...
Head of Strategy at NeoSwap Advisor @ New Finance VC, @ Redbrain Interested in learning. Art collector, investor, DeFi obsessed, golfer.

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I was listening to Tim Ferriss’ interview with Balajis the other day and he is discussing the idea that code is law.
Balajis proposes that courts can become better via smart-contracts.
Balajis shared some thoughts below:
So in a sense it’s a violation of equal protection, every time somebody with the same facts walks into a Wyoming court and gets different justice, for example, than a Milwaukee court or a Minnesota court, whatever. Every time that happens on something that’s supposed to be uniform, the same input should give the same output. That’s what rule of law should mean
Judicial discretion in many ways is actually often bad because you have things where people start going jurisdiction shopping. Not because the law is different, which is fine, but because the judge likes this or likes that, and has a certain attitude towards this.
It’s like, there’s an apocryphal Israeli study where people get lighter sentences after the judges have eaten something, and their blood sugar is up. So they’re more merciful. That’s bad. Instead you should have this alternative.
Do we want code as law?
I am a blockchain/crypto enthusiast as many of you know. I question the rigidity of code as law though.
Humans don’t actually like perfection.
A perverse question, do we need some flexibility and uncertainty in the judicial system to make it acceptable to our minds. Is the idea that you could get away with something, or get a lighter sentence because the judge is happy that day, a good thing?
It is kind of like the ‘flaw’ in the Matrix. Humans need some level of imperfection and uncertainty.
Can you programme in flexibility or an element of randomness. I think this is what is known as ‘noise’ in AI?
Something to think about as we move ever closer to making code = law :)
I was listening to Tim Ferriss’ interview with Balajis the other day and he is discussing the idea that code is law.
Balajis proposes that courts can become better via smart-contracts.
Balajis shared some thoughts below:
So in a sense it’s a violation of equal protection, every time somebody with the same facts walks into a Wyoming court and gets different justice, for example, than a Milwaukee court or a Minnesota court, whatever. Every time that happens on something that’s supposed to be uniform, the same input should give the same output. That’s what rule of law should mean
Judicial discretion in many ways is actually often bad because you have things where people start going jurisdiction shopping. Not because the law is different, which is fine, but because the judge likes this or likes that, and has a certain attitude towards this.
It’s like, there’s an apocryphal Israeli study where people get lighter sentences after the judges have eaten something, and their blood sugar is up. So they’re more merciful. That’s bad. Instead you should have this alternative.
Do we want code as law?
I am a blockchain/crypto enthusiast as many of you know. I question the rigidity of code as law though.
Humans don’t actually like perfection.
A perverse question, do we need some flexibility and uncertainty in the judicial system to make it acceptable to our minds. Is the idea that you could get away with something, or get a lighter sentence because the judge is happy that day, a good thing?
It is kind of like the ‘flaw’ in the Matrix. Humans need some level of imperfection and uncertainty.
Can you programme in flexibility or an element of randomness. I think this is what is known as ‘noise’ in AI?
Something to think about as we move ever closer to making code = law :)
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