Betraying Blockchain: Accountability, Transparency and Document Standards for Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Terms Defined
2.1.1. “Blockchain”
2.1.2. “Non-Fungible Tokens” (NFTs)
2.1.3. “Document Standards”
2.1.4. “Users”
2.1.5. “Firms”
2.1.6. “Regulators”
2.2. Project Design
2.2.1. Queries for Users
- Copyright: How do you clearly and conspicuously “attach” terms and conditions to an NFT and ensure that those terms follow the NFT and bind subsequent owners? How are evolving copyright issues handled (public domain laws, estate changes, etc.)?
- Standard form contracts: Do these tokens present the same issues as other standard form contracts if this same genre of contract is used to lay out terms?
- Interface design: Do these records match user expectations and follow usability and design best practices? Are they designed with users in mind? Who is their audience?
2.2.2. Queries for Firms
- Jurisdiction: If a Firm makes use of a public blockchain to create their NFTs, do they streamline transactions or obscure necessary data (e.g., accd. to FCPA, SOX, UETA)?
- Liability: Do the current records protect from liability or increase risk?
- Compliance: Do the current NFT records aid or hinder other compliance or recordkeeping efforts?
2.2.3. Queries for Regulators
- Investigation: Do the records produced by NFTs allow for the same procedures when investigating a bad actor?
- Evidence: Do the current records serve as viable evidence? What are the consequences if they do (accd. to the US Federal rules of Evidence) but do not have the required components of legitimate records (accd. to document standards)?
- Policy: How does blockchain aid or hinder the regulations set forth by KYC, OFAC, FASB, SOX, and GDPR, among others?
2.3. Limitations
3. Results
3.1. Description of Results
3.1.1. Results for Users
3.1.2. Results for Firms
3.1.3. Results for Regulators
3.2. Interpretation of Results
- (1)
- A parallel paper contract with agreements from both parties (public records
- (2)
- Searches, subpoenas to record keeping authorities)
- (3)
- A history of payments between A and B (subpoenas to corresponding financial institutions)
- (4)
- Email, Phone, other types of communication (subpoenas or search warrants)
- (5)
- Undercover, if necessary (to reveal and confirm any allegations of fraud on the part of the various parties)
- (6)
- Witness accounts from the inception of the agreement through the present (interviews)
- (7)
- Conditions on the blockchain that would reveal payment/non-payment
- (8)
- Their corresponding truth/falseness in real life
- (9)
- Authentication protocols for both users and their conditions (are the transactions automated or triggered by one party or the other, and for what reason?)
- (10)
- Personal computer evidence (acquired through search warrants or consent searches)
- (11)
- Wallet managing services, along with ISPs, phone records and other third-party record keepers would be acquired through subpoena or court order.
4. Discussion
- Users: Blockchain records for Users could be developed with standard form contract issues in mind, as well as with usability and interface theory conceptualizations of how users engage with the technology and the records it produces. This might include designing the records so that they include context and familiarity, which would be useful in holding the parties of a contract accountable and providing those with the information they need to litigate a more powerful party. It could also normalize some of these design conventions so that the average person could understand their information, creating best practices that could iteratively be made better moving forward. This is especially important for IoT applications as they are embedded into the fabric of everyday life, proliferating contracts for each instance of each transaction.
- Firms: Blockchain records for Firms could be improved with some research that focuses on the information that should be required for companies to retain on their own records. Also, it should be considered how this would contribute to compliance or a lack thereof. Negotiating privacy concerns with the information that the company needs to be compliant is one of the biggest concerns for Firms at the moment. Reducing risk and liability for this new type of company encourages innovation in this space as well as sustainability. More users will begin to make use of blockchain applications as trust in the companies increases, which will help streamline some of the compliance requirements into more practical applications.
- Regulators: Blockchain records present several quagmires for Regulators. Since the decentralization of the blockchain ledger offers protection for Users, it is difficult to negotiate this protection with the necessary information needed to keep the Firms accountable. One possible way forward is to create personal data stores for consumers that could be accessed in an investigation [41]. There are still issues with this idea such as the inability to access this data due to multiple entities being involved, yet it could be studied as a model to prompt the sorting out of what information needs to be on the blockchain and who is responsible for its retention. Making nuanced and effective regulatory schemes is a concern being tackled for all technology applications. Along these lines, new disclosure laws such as GDPR and CCPA can be satisfied as effort is put forth in this space.
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Cornelius, K. Betraying Blockchain: Accountability, Transparency and Document Standards for Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs). Information 2021, 12, 358. https://doi.org/10.3390/info12090358
Cornelius K. Betraying Blockchain: Accountability, Transparency and Document Standards for Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs). Information. 2021; 12(9):358. https://doi.org/10.3390/info12090358
Chicago/Turabian StyleCornelius, Kristin. 2021. "Betraying Blockchain: Accountability, Transparency and Document Standards for Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs)" Information 12, no. 9: 358. https://doi.org/10.3390/info12090358
APA StyleCornelius, K. (2021). Betraying Blockchain: Accountability, Transparency and Document Standards for Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs). Information, 12(9), 358. https://doi.org/10.3390/info12090358