A Vision for Digital Property Rights, Feat. Nic Carter

Most people today look at social platforms like any other private company, but what if we saw them as alternative jurisdictions with a new set of property rights?

AccessTimeIconJun 10, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. UTC
Updated Aug 19, 2021 at 2:29 a.m. UTC

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Most people today look at social platforms like any other private company, but what if we saw them as alternative jurisdictions with a new set of property rights?

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    Today on the Brief:

    • A record week for peer-to-peer exchanges in the developing world
    • A digital dollar gets discussed in Congress 
    • Previewing the Federal Reserve’s FOMC guidance

    Our main topic: A brainstorm on digital property rights

    Here’s a radical idea. What if your time and effort building a following on social media and serving that following with your content meant you had distinct property rights protecting it on social media platforms? 

    It’s wild in the context of today’s terms of service, but has significant legal precedent in the world of physical land, call it digital homesteading. 

    In this new type of deep-dive 20-minute episode we’re calling a “Breakdown Brainstorm,” Castle Island Ventures investor Nic Carter looks at:

    • The two schools of thought around digital property rights
    • The historical precedent for squatter’s rights
    • What the specific example of the USA’s Westward Expansion can teach us
    • Why this type of approach can be highly economically generative, according to economists like De Soto
    • How John Locke’s theories provide a moral basis for the argument 
    • Why today’s platforms are akin to anti-democratic feudal lords
    • How bitcoin provides a model and a mechanism for digital rights enforced on the protocol level rather than by a state or other external actor

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