The Distributed Liability of Distributed Ledgers: Legal Risks of Blockchain
University of Illinois Law Review, 2017-2018, Forthcoming
University of Luxembourg Law Working Paper No. 007/2017
Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC) Working Paper 002/2017
University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law Research Paper No. 2017/020
49 Pages Posted: 15 Aug 2017 Last revised: 27 Oct 2017
Date Written: August 13, 2017
Abstract
The transformative potential of distributed ledger technology, especially in the financial sector, is attracting enormous interest. Many financial institutions are investing heavily in proof of concept demonstrations and the rollout of pilot applications of DLT technology. Part of the attraction of distributed ledger systems, such as Blockchain, lies in transcending law and regulation. From a technological perspective, DLT is generally seen as offering unbreakable security, immutability and unparalleled transparency, so law and regulation are seen as unnecessary. Yet while the law may be dull and the technology exciting, the impact of the law cannot be simply wished away. With data distributed among many ledgers, legal risk will remain. DLT projects may well be found, by courts, to constitute joint ventures with liability spread across all owners and operators of systems serving as distributed ledgers. Regulators seeking to support appropriate approaches to twenty-first century financial infrastructure must focus on these legal consequences.
Keywords: Bitcoin, Blockchain, Distributed Ledger Technology, Financial Infrastructure, FinTech, RegTech
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation