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RE: Steem Town Hall - Today in 1 hour

in #steem5 years ago (edited)

I think the key limiting step can be seen as regulatory, because the regulatory environment and people in general, did not contemplate the idea of developing a proper framework for the crypto world. Hence, they will trait it (law) in most cases as a conventional business case.
Even if we assume that there was a contract. The lack of information makes it difficult to define the nature of that contract.

  • For how much time the contract was supposed to run. 1,10,30 years? Or until the fund reaches 0?
  • To what extent.
  • How much Steemit Inc gained.
  • Is the fund that was spent on development taking from a safe dedicated solely for development.
  • Is the fund for development growing over time or decreasing.
  • What are the expenses and taxes that were paid until today?
  • How to differentiate between the property of inc investors and the fund for development.
  • How can we know for sure the percentages of each thing if we assume that development and expenses were financed only by STINC. Percentages can shift; thus, things will get even dirtier.
  • Wich statement should be considered as the source of the contract? and are the statements that came after should be seen as an update to the first statement?
  • If the first statement is legally binding, why the second one (the update is not)?

... There are a lot of things to consider, a lot of things that we don't have just because a real contract can sometimes contain thousands of pages just to clarify everything. Saying “I will support” for example isn't a legally binding (can be contested at so many levels) contract and the reasons are obvious.

There is also a question of "with whom exactly the contract was made?"

  • The community?
  • The witnesses at the time?
  • The Blockchain?
  • What if the witnesses changed, what if the community changed and new people got in?
  • What if changes were made to the Blockchain that STINC doesn’t approve of? Do they still need to provide support?
  • Is the contract tied to the first version of the Blockchain?

Contracts can also be altered:

  • Can we consider the witnesses accepting the status quo before as a form of approval and consent?
  • What if STINC fills for bankruptcy?
  • Who has the right to agree or refuse the proposed alterations?
  • Were there anything (rules, sectioning) in the contract in case someone buys the company?
    ...

These are just a few ideas, things are even more complex since the company is based in the US. If the case goes to the court, I can tell that people are going to lose against Sun, on top of losing a lot of money + the potential reparations for Steemit Inc for the damages.

People should not take this lightly.

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Investors in Steem are potentially injured parties if Stinc reneges on it's representations of how it would use it's stake. They depended on those representations when they purchased their Steem, and for years Stinc fulfilled those obligations.

We shouldn't take this lightly, and many of the points you raise are valid. The witnesses and investors injured by Sun's actions need counsel, yesterday, IMHO.

Edit: this may turn out to be a watershed moment in legal history. Lawyers for all time hereafter may regard this as the moment when they gained the power to take over the world.

Two questions that I don't know the answer to:

  1. Was there code employed on any fork that prevented the STEEM account from voting on witnesses?
  2. Just as the code ALLOWS the STEEM account to vote on witnesses, doesn't the code also allow witnesses to run code that PREVENTS that account from voting?
  3. Do witnesses have a fiduciary responsibility to protect stakeholders?
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