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Crypto Scam Criminal Trial Tests 'Code Is Law' Claim by Trader (bloomberg.com) 87

A jailed trader accused of stealing $110 million on the Mango Markets exchange faces a criminal trial this week that will test the reach of a US crackdown on cryptocurrencies. From a report: Prosecutors charged Avraham Eisenberg with manipulating Mango Markets futures contracts on Oct. 11, 2022, to boost the price of swaps by 1,300% in 20 minutes. He then "borrowed" from the exchange against the inflated value of those contracts, a move the government claims was a theft. Jury selection begins Monday in New York federal court, where groundbreaking crypto cases have played out. FTX co-founder Sam Bankman-Fried was sentenced there last month to 25 years in prison for orchestrating a multibillion-dollar scheme, while Terraform Labs Pte. and co-founder Do Kwon were found liable Friday for fraud in civil trial over the firm's 2022 collapse, which wiped out $40 billion in investor assets.

Eisenberg, a self-described "applied game theorist," claims his actions weren't theft at all. Rather, he says, he legally exploited a weakness in the decentralized finance application. The trial will apparently be the first time a US criminal jury will weigh what type of "DeFi" transactions are legal. In the crypto world, where digital blockchains govern who owns what, the virtual ecosystem is built around the notion that "code is law." It means that if something isn't explicitly forbidden by terms of a crypto platform, then government can't intercede. But prosecutors say those rules can't protect traders against possible criminal charges for market manipulation or fraud.

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Crypto Scam Criminal Trial Tests 'Code Is Law' Claim by Trader

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  • "No your Honor..." (Score:5, Insightful)

    by firewrought ( 36952 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @12:20PM (#64378380)
    "I didn't steal the cabbage, I legally exploited a weakness in the grocery store's transaction model by skipping the check-out line. It's okay because I'm a game theorist."

    Dumbass

  • For a moment I thought it was the same guy who was given a pardon by the con artist after being convicted of running a ponzi scheme, and then went about committing more fraud after his release [nbcnews.com]. But it's not.

    Different person, same group.
  • Hope that he is found not guilty. Then maybe all this crypto bullshit will finally be shown as the pyramid scheme (an money-laundering scheme) that it is.

    • Then what, it will go away? No, proving it's open to scamming will attract more opportunists, under the "greater fool" theory. After all, this guy walked away with real gains, apparently.
    • by Sique ( 173459 )
      So you subscribe to the "I know no method to secure the repeal of bad or obnoxious laws so effective as their stringent execution." school of thought.
  • code isn't law (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jddimarco ( 1754954 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @12:54PM (#64378472)
    It's courts, not code, that interpret law. The "code is law" people can try to claim that because the phrase has been bandied around a great deal, that everyone who gets into crypto knows very well that in so doing, they are agreeing in advance to whatever the code permits. But it seems obvious to me that many if not most people who invest in crypto are not knowingly agreeing in advance to everything the code may permit. I suspect the courts will see it the same way. We'll see, of course.
    • by Dusanyu ( 675778 )
      "Code is law" is a odd argument if people want to make the argument that Cryptocurrancy has value. If that is the case the law is the law and theft is theft. Also ic Crypto is monet these exchanges should be under the same rules and regulations as banks
      • It's a lot like they're playing Monopoly with real money, exactly by the rules. As long as there's a loophole, somebody will find it. But it's not fraud if everybody playing agreed the rules are the rules. It might be immoral though. Should the courts involve themselves in the rules of a game ?
    • The thing that gets me with "code is law" is that it is essentially the same as "they just gave me the money at the bank because I asked for it. How was I supposed to know they felt threatened by my finger in my pocket and saying don't push the silent alarm?"

  • No. The law is the law. The courts and the legal system is the law. It’s a flawed, sometimes inconsistent system, but it’s pretty well defined, it’s got a 300-year history (in the US) and it’s backed up and enforced by 99% of society and many, MANY men with guns.

    It’s always amusing when a sovereign-citizen or true-believer-anarchist runs up against the law and gets all huffy and surprised when their interpretation of the universe isn’t meekly accepted by every human o
    • "Code is law" was popularized by Lawrence Lessig. It does not mean "code should be law". Like "information wants to be free" it's an observation, a statement about the nature of things. Information doesn't have a mind with which it could want to be free, but we observe that information that is meant to be unavailable to the public doesn't stay unavailable. This is because information is easily transferred and copied, so keeping it locked up is difficult. "Two can keep a secret if one of them is dead" is ano

  • Unfortunately, people already know that it's bullshit and just hard-fork blockchains when something happens that the code allows but the cabal doesn't like.

  • by Sique ( 173459 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @02:52PM (#64378728) Homepage
    In a very profound way, all the crypto scams surfacing prove the dream of many a libertarian wrong. Liberating money by creating a money devoid of any governmental oversight? What could go wrong?

    Now the milk is spilled, and the government (e.g. the judiciary branch of government) is tasked with sorting out the mess.

  • It's been a trick since the beginning of time. Long, lengthy contracts that average people have no possible way of understanding rule the world. If the average person breaks a rule, they are prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. And they always lose because the rules in place are protected by the courts. However, if average joe plays by the rules, and succeeds, then the rules don't apply anymore. It's considered the fault of the person (i.e. Fraud) to follow the rules. I understand fairness, but it
  • "Hi your Honor and members of the jury, my defense against these charges of market manipulation and blatant fraud is my diagnosis as a sociopath. I believe that anything I do that isn't specifically prevented by a technical barrier is legal as well as ethical. I don't actually believe in ethics but my lawyer told me you people believe in ethics so I tossed it in there. I plead not guilty by virtue of being a sociopath, thank you".

  • 'Code Is Law' only works to the point that there may be no way for a court to directly compel 'X coins now belong to Y person' like they can for real world property. However, Code Is Law has no way of preventing a court from punishing *you*, since no blockchain can reach out and prevent the police from arresting and jailing you.

Do you suffer painful recrimination? -- Nancy Boxer, "Structured Programming with Come-froms"

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