In the early morning, the San Francisco Bay Area is shrouded in mist. Inside an office, the blue light of a screen illuminates the tired face of a developer. His eyes are bloodshot, and his fingers glide rapidly across the keyboard. This is the final check before deploying a contract; every semicolon, every boundary condition, could be a matter of life and death.
Suddenly, the Telegram channel erupts. Someone has discovered that the project team violated the token unlocking promise in the whitepaper.
Across the ocean, on the screen of a meme player, countless transaction data lines weave together, outlining the movements of the whales. DeFi miners check the time lock on the new mine: â72 hours,â they nod, âsafe.â
In Discord, a heated debate rages over the registration of a DAO. Outside this turmoil, an AI Agent quietly writes its reasoning process onto the blockchain.
This is an ordinary morning in the crypto world of 2024. On the surface, these scenes seem unrelated, but beneath the complex facade, there is an invisible bond connecting them all. That bond is the unwavering belief in âCode is Law.â
In this world built by code, code is the law, the belief, and the ultimate arbiter. This rule, like an invisible chain, tightly binds together a world full of speculation, ideals, innovation, and chaos. It is the cornerstone of the crypto world and the soil in which countless stories are born.
But what exactly does âCode is Lawâ mean? And how did this phrase evolve from a warning into a belief? To answer that, we must go back 25 years, to an autumn day, to an office at Harvard Law SchoolâŠ
In November 1999, on the Harvard campus, the autumn chill was in the air. Professor Lawrence Lessig sat in his office. He had gained fame for serving as a neutral legal expert in the Microsoft antitrust case, and in just a few weeks, his new book Code: and Other Laws of Cyberspace was about to be published.
The wave of the internet had swept across the United States in the 1990s, and several years earlier, Lessig had begun pondering a seemingly simple question: In traditional society, behavior is constrained by laws, ethics, markets, and physical laws. But in cyberspace, these constraints seemed to become blurred. However, another form of constraint appeared to be more direct: system administrators controlled usersâ behavior by setting permissions. This control was not enforced through threats of punishment but by directly determining what was possible and what was not. âIn a Unix system, if you donât have permission, you just canât open that file,â he wrote in his notebook. âThis is not a legal constraint but something more fundamental.â
In front of him, on his notebook, was a simple diagram: the layered structure of the TCP/IP protocol. The manuscript noted that this was a revolutionary design because the protocol did not concern itself with the content of the data packets or who you were. It only cared about one thing: transmitting data according to the rules of the protocol. This âpermissionlessâ quality made the internet a free land.
But Lessig also keenly observed that new walls were growing on this free land of TCP/IP. Amazon could shut down your account, AOL could block your login, and Google could decide what content should be seen. Commercial platforms built on open protocols were creating new forms of control.
The first chapter of his book was titled âCode is Law,â but this phrase was not meant as praise, but as a warning. Lessig was concerned that if commercial giants and governments controlled the writing of code, they could control the entire cyberspace.
âEvery era has its potential regulators threatening freedom, and we live in the era of cyberspace, which also has a regulator, and this regulator threatens our freedom. That regulator is code. It determines how easy or hard it is to protect privacy and censor speech. It affects whether information is universally accessible or tiered. It decides who can see what or which content will be monitored. In many ways, we can only begin to recognize the regulation of cyberspace once we understand the nature of code.â
Two months later, The New York Times published a review of the book, stating:
âThese discussions are thoughtful, but the premise of these discussions is unstable; Lessig doesnât provide much evidence to prove that privacy and freedom are being lost on the internet.â
In a sense, Lessig had foreseen the future. But he didnât foresee that his warning would soon turn into a flag. In garages in Silicon Valley, in the studies of cryptographers, and in front of computers around the world, a group of people were brewing a revolution. They would not be enslaved by code; instead, they aimed to use code to rebuild freedom.
In 1994, Washington. Nick Szabo, a member of the cypherpunk movement, was writing in his modest apartment. On his screen was a paper on âsmart contracts.â His apartment was filled with books on law and computer science, reflecting his dual passion for both fields. He had long been contemplating how to combine the certainty of law with the precision of computer programs. âImagine a vending machine,â Szabo wrote, âthis is the simplest form of a smart contract. It doesnât need a judge to enforce the contract, nor does it need police to maintain order. The rules are written into the machineâs program.â
âTraditional contracts have too many problems,â he told a reporter who came to interview him. âPerformance depends on peopleâs willingness, and dispute resolution requires lengthy litigation. But if we could encode contracts as programs, they would run strictly according to predefined rules. No judges, no lawyers, just code.â
The reporter questioned why people would trust code. Szabo smiled mysteriously: âBecause code doesnât lie. It canât be bribed, threatened, or change its mind arbitrarily. It simply follows the established rules faithfully.â
In the paper that followed, Szabo elaborated on his concept of smart contracts:
A smart contract is a computerized transaction protocol that executes the terms of a contract. The overall goal of smart contract design is to meet common contractual conditions, minimize malicious and accidental exceptions, and reduce the need for trusted intermediaries. I believe that significantly reducing the transaction costs of enforcing certain contracts and the potential for creating new types of businesses and social institutions based on smart contracts is enormous, but it has not been thoroughly studied yet.
However, the technological foundation for realizing this vision had yet to emerge. Szabo and other cypherpunks would have to wait many more years.
On the evening of October 31, 2008, a calm Halloween evening, Satoshi@gmx.com sent an email that would change history. The subject was simple: Bitcoin P2P e-cash paper.
The email, sent to a cryptography mailing list, read: âIâve been working on a new electronic cash system that is completely peer-to-peer, with no trusted third party.â
On January 3, 2009, the Bitcoin genesis block was mined. In this system, no one could break the rules of the code. âCode is Law,â which started as a warning from Professor Lessig, evolved into an ideal for the cryptographic community and eventually found its first full implementation in Bitcoin.
In the fall of 2013, in a café at the University of Toronto, Vitalik Buterin was sketching diagrams on his notebook. As the editor of Bitcoin Magazine, he had thoroughly studied every line of Bitcoinâs code. But he believed Bitcoinâs design was too conservative. âBitcoin proved that code-based governance is possible,â he told his peers, âbut why limit it to just the transfer of currency? What if we could create a Turing-complete systemâŠâ This idea quickly evolved into the whitepaper for Ethereum. Vitalik envisioned a âworld computerâ where anyone could deploy smart contracts and create various applications.
âAt the time, many thought it was crazy,â recalled an early contributor. âWe were going to build a platform completely governed by code, where anyone could run programs. The risks were too great.â But this was precisely the next step in the evolution of the âCode is Lawâ concept: not only was the platform itself governed by code, but every application running on it also adhered to the same principle.
The smart contract envisioned by Nick Szabo more than a decade earlier had finally found its soil for implementation. A decentralized application ecosystem began to form. From simple token issuance to complex financial protocols, and to decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), immutable code began to take over an increasing number of scenarios in this world.
In April 2016, in Switzerland, the Slock.it team introduced their ambitious plan: The DAO, a decentralized investment fund governed entirely by code.
âImagine a fund without a board of directors or a CEO,â explained founder Christoph Jentzsch. âAll decisions are made by token holders through smart contract voting. This is the ultimate practice of âCode is Law.ââ
The DAOâs crowdfunding campaign launched, and within just 28 days, it raised $150 million in ETH, setting a record for the largest crowdfunding effort at the time. âPeople trust the code,â said an early participant. âThe smart contract is open and anyone can inspect it. This doesnât rely on peopleâs promises; it relies on immutable code.â
However, hidden within this seemingly perfect code was a fatal flaw. On the morning of June 17, 2016, an anonymous hacker discovered a recursive call vulnerability in The DAO contract. Through carefully crafted transactions, the hacker began transferring ETH from The DAO into a sub-DAO. âIn theory, this was entirely within the rules of the contract,â explained a security researcher. âThe hacker didnât âbreakâ the code; he simply exploited an allowed action. From the perspective of âCode is Law,â this was completely âlegal.ââ
However, after over 3.6 million ETH were transferred, the entire Ethereum community faced an unprecedented crisis.
âIf âCode is Law,â then this attack is legal,â one faction argued. âWe cannot change the rules just because we donât like the outcome. This goes against the fundamental principles of decentralization.â
âBut code is meant to serve people,â the opposing faction countered. âIf the code leads to obviously unjust results, we have a responsibility to correct it.â
The intense debate lasted for weeks. Ultimately, Vitalik and the Ethereum core team proposed a hard fork: rolling back the blockchain to return the stolen funds to a new contract.
This decision sparked even greater controversy. Some community members stood by the original chain, leading to the creation of Ethereum Classic (ETC). This was not just a split in the blockchain but also a division in ideology.
âFor many, the pure ideal of âCode is Lawâ was shattered,â lamented an early Ethereum developer. âWe realized that code can never be perfect.â
In the summer of 2020, the crypto world witnessed a new wave of excitement: DeFi Summer. A variety of innovative projects sprang up rapidly: Aaveâs flash loans, Curveâs stablecoin trading, Yearnâs yield aggregation⊠Each project was using code to redefine the possibilities of finance.
But with the enthusiasm came growing risks. âDo you remember YAM?â a DeFi miner recalled. âA small error in the code led to the complete collapse of the governance mechanism. It reminded us that âCode is Lawâ is a double-edged sword. The consequences of code errors can be more severe than human mistakes.â
In early 2022, with the widespread adoption of Web3, DAOs experienced explosive growth, each exploring new possibilities for decentralized collaboration and governance.
âAt first, we thought DAOs were about using token votes to govern organizations with code,â recalled a member of a DAO. âBut soon we realized that reality is much more complicated. Look at the governance process of every major DAOâon the surface, itâs executed through smart contracts, but real decision-making often happens in Discord or forum discussions. These non-code-based political coordinations are actually the core of DAO operations.â
âCode is indeed law, but not the only law,â said a core member of a DAO. âItâs more like a component of a legal system, needing to work in coordination with other partsâcommunity discussions, expert opinions, real-world constraints, etc.â
Just a month ago, Proposal 662 from NounsDAO sparked deeper reflection. While most DAOs relied heavily on human coordination rather than code for their operation, NounsDAO had achieved near-complete operation through smart contract code. However, Proposal 662 suggested registering a DUNA entity in Wyoming, embracing an off-chain legal system.
This sparked heated debate within the community. âWe joined NounsDAO because it proved that a fully code-governed organization was possible!â one member said angrily. âNow you want to replace code with the legal system. Isnât this surrendering to traditional systems?â
âWe canât pretend the real world doesnât exist,â said a supporter of the proposal. âUltimately, DAOs must operate in the real world. A reasonable compromise isnât betrayal of ideals; itâs making them sustainable.â
Support for the proposal grew slowly but steadily, and it passed.
Almost simultaneously, a new participant joined the crypto world: the AI Agent.
In the âCode is Lawâ world, AI found its ideal habitat. The rules here are definite, verifiable, free from human interference, and most importantly, they do not distinguish between humans and AI. Protocols only care about whether the pre-set rules are followed, allowing AI to trade, provide services, and participate in governance autonomously. All decisions and actions can be made through code.
In this crypto world, where code is law and algorithms govern value, AI Agent transitioned for the first time from a piece of code into a presence. As more and more AI Agents join, the crypto world will form a new ecosystem: humans and AI interacting under the same set of rules, creating unprecedented collaboration models.
In 12 days, it will be the 25th anniversary of the publication of Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace. Over the course of these 25 years, âCode is Lawâ has taken an unexpected path. It has transformed from a warning against digital authoritarianism into a symbol of crypto-punk rebellion, and has been continuously tested, adjusted, and evolved in practice. The evolution of this concept mirrors our deepening understanding of the digital world:
Initially, Lessig warned that code could become a tool for controlling cyberspace. This concern remains deeply relevant todayâtechnology companies influence users through algorithms, and in the age of AI, an insecure model could lead to catastrophic results.
Then, the crypto-punks turned this warning into action. Bitcoin demonstrated another possibility: code can not only restrict freedom but also protect it.The DAO incident served as a mirror, reflecting the limitations of pure code governance. But this failure was not an endpoint; it was a new beginning. It prompted us to ask: How should code interact with human society?
The rise of DeFi brought new surprises: in certain scenarios, code can indeed be more effective than traditional rules. Automated market makers, flash loans, and permissionless lending showed the unique advantages of code governance.
The evolution of DAOs is the most enlightening. From the dogmatic âcode-onlyâ approach to seeking a balance with the real world, this process reflects an important reality: at least for now, code cannot replace all other rules, but must coexist and complement them.
The introduction of AI has opened up new possibilities. As artificial intelligence begins to operate autonomously on the blockchain, âCode is Lawâ may gain a new dimension.
Outside the window, the morning fog in San Francisco is dissipating. A new day has begun. In every corner of this world, a blockchain network composed of countless nodes is operating. Smart contracts, like tireless guardians, faithfully execute their missions; DAOs are conducting the largest governance experiment in human history; AI Agents are evolving at a pace beyond human imagination, carving out new forms of existence in the world built by code.
This is the new world created by code. It is imperfect, but full of vitality; it has flaws, but is constantly evolving; it is still young, but already shows the potential to change the world. It carries the promise of making the world more open, transparent, and fair. Although this promise has not yet been fully realized, each participant is pushing this promise step by step toward becoming a reality in their own way.
Perhaps the most profound lesson of âCode is Lawâ over the past 25 years is this: it is not a flawless doctrine, but an ongoing experiment, a process of continuous exploration. In this world constructed by code, people are not only followers of the rules but also creators of the rules. Every line of code written by people is shaping the future of the world.
In the early morning, the San Francisco Bay Area is shrouded in mist. Inside an office, the blue light of a screen illuminates the tired face of a developer. His eyes are bloodshot, and his fingers glide rapidly across the keyboard. This is the final check before deploying a contract; every semicolon, every boundary condition, could be a matter of life and death.
Suddenly, the Telegram channel erupts. Someone has discovered that the project team violated the token unlocking promise in the whitepaper.
Across the ocean, on the screen of a meme player, countless transaction data lines weave together, outlining the movements of the whales. DeFi miners check the time lock on the new mine: â72 hours,â they nod, âsafe.â
In Discord, a heated debate rages over the registration of a DAO. Outside this turmoil, an AI Agent quietly writes its reasoning process onto the blockchain.
This is an ordinary morning in the crypto world of 2024. On the surface, these scenes seem unrelated, but beneath the complex facade, there is an invisible bond connecting them all. That bond is the unwavering belief in âCode is Law.â
In this world built by code, code is the law, the belief, and the ultimate arbiter. This rule, like an invisible chain, tightly binds together a world full of speculation, ideals, innovation, and chaos. It is the cornerstone of the crypto world and the soil in which countless stories are born.
But what exactly does âCode is Lawâ mean? And how did this phrase evolve from a warning into a belief? To answer that, we must go back 25 years, to an autumn day, to an office at Harvard Law SchoolâŠ
In November 1999, on the Harvard campus, the autumn chill was in the air. Professor Lawrence Lessig sat in his office. He had gained fame for serving as a neutral legal expert in the Microsoft antitrust case, and in just a few weeks, his new book Code: and Other Laws of Cyberspace was about to be published.
The wave of the internet had swept across the United States in the 1990s, and several years earlier, Lessig had begun pondering a seemingly simple question: In traditional society, behavior is constrained by laws, ethics, markets, and physical laws. But in cyberspace, these constraints seemed to become blurred. However, another form of constraint appeared to be more direct: system administrators controlled usersâ behavior by setting permissions. This control was not enforced through threats of punishment but by directly determining what was possible and what was not. âIn a Unix system, if you donât have permission, you just canât open that file,â he wrote in his notebook. âThis is not a legal constraint but something more fundamental.â
In front of him, on his notebook, was a simple diagram: the layered structure of the TCP/IP protocol. The manuscript noted that this was a revolutionary design because the protocol did not concern itself with the content of the data packets or who you were. It only cared about one thing: transmitting data according to the rules of the protocol. This âpermissionlessâ quality made the internet a free land.
But Lessig also keenly observed that new walls were growing on this free land of TCP/IP. Amazon could shut down your account, AOL could block your login, and Google could decide what content should be seen. Commercial platforms built on open protocols were creating new forms of control.
The first chapter of his book was titled âCode is Law,â but this phrase was not meant as praise, but as a warning. Lessig was concerned that if commercial giants and governments controlled the writing of code, they could control the entire cyberspace.
âEvery era has its potential regulators threatening freedom, and we live in the era of cyberspace, which also has a regulator, and this regulator threatens our freedom. That regulator is code. It determines how easy or hard it is to protect privacy and censor speech. It affects whether information is universally accessible or tiered. It decides who can see what or which content will be monitored. In many ways, we can only begin to recognize the regulation of cyberspace once we understand the nature of code.â
Two months later, The New York Times published a review of the book, stating:
âThese discussions are thoughtful, but the premise of these discussions is unstable; Lessig doesnât provide much evidence to prove that privacy and freedom are being lost on the internet.â
In a sense, Lessig had foreseen the future. But he didnât foresee that his warning would soon turn into a flag. In garages in Silicon Valley, in the studies of cryptographers, and in front of computers around the world, a group of people were brewing a revolution. They would not be enslaved by code; instead, they aimed to use code to rebuild freedom.
In 1994, Washington. Nick Szabo, a member of the cypherpunk movement, was writing in his modest apartment. On his screen was a paper on âsmart contracts.â His apartment was filled with books on law and computer science, reflecting his dual passion for both fields. He had long been contemplating how to combine the certainty of law with the precision of computer programs. âImagine a vending machine,â Szabo wrote, âthis is the simplest form of a smart contract. It doesnât need a judge to enforce the contract, nor does it need police to maintain order. The rules are written into the machineâs program.â
âTraditional contracts have too many problems,â he told a reporter who came to interview him. âPerformance depends on peopleâs willingness, and dispute resolution requires lengthy litigation. But if we could encode contracts as programs, they would run strictly according to predefined rules. No judges, no lawyers, just code.â
The reporter questioned why people would trust code. Szabo smiled mysteriously: âBecause code doesnât lie. It canât be bribed, threatened, or change its mind arbitrarily. It simply follows the established rules faithfully.â
In the paper that followed, Szabo elaborated on his concept of smart contracts:
A smart contract is a computerized transaction protocol that executes the terms of a contract. The overall goal of smart contract design is to meet common contractual conditions, minimize malicious and accidental exceptions, and reduce the need for trusted intermediaries. I believe that significantly reducing the transaction costs of enforcing certain contracts and the potential for creating new types of businesses and social institutions based on smart contracts is enormous, but it has not been thoroughly studied yet.
However, the technological foundation for realizing this vision had yet to emerge. Szabo and other cypherpunks would have to wait many more years.
On the evening of October 31, 2008, a calm Halloween evening, Satoshi@gmx.com sent an email that would change history. The subject was simple: Bitcoin P2P e-cash paper.
The email, sent to a cryptography mailing list, read: âIâve been working on a new electronic cash system that is completely peer-to-peer, with no trusted third party.â
On January 3, 2009, the Bitcoin genesis block was mined. In this system, no one could break the rules of the code. âCode is Law,â which started as a warning from Professor Lessig, evolved into an ideal for the cryptographic community and eventually found its first full implementation in Bitcoin.
In the fall of 2013, in a café at the University of Toronto, Vitalik Buterin was sketching diagrams on his notebook. As the editor of Bitcoin Magazine, he had thoroughly studied every line of Bitcoinâs code. But he believed Bitcoinâs design was too conservative. âBitcoin proved that code-based governance is possible,â he told his peers, âbut why limit it to just the transfer of currency? What if we could create a Turing-complete systemâŠâ This idea quickly evolved into the whitepaper for Ethereum. Vitalik envisioned a âworld computerâ where anyone could deploy smart contracts and create various applications.
âAt the time, many thought it was crazy,â recalled an early contributor. âWe were going to build a platform completely governed by code, where anyone could run programs. The risks were too great.â But this was precisely the next step in the evolution of the âCode is Lawâ concept: not only was the platform itself governed by code, but every application running on it also adhered to the same principle.
The smart contract envisioned by Nick Szabo more than a decade earlier had finally found its soil for implementation. A decentralized application ecosystem began to form. From simple token issuance to complex financial protocols, and to decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), immutable code began to take over an increasing number of scenarios in this world.
In April 2016, in Switzerland, the Slock.it team introduced their ambitious plan: The DAO, a decentralized investment fund governed entirely by code.
âImagine a fund without a board of directors or a CEO,â explained founder Christoph Jentzsch. âAll decisions are made by token holders through smart contract voting. This is the ultimate practice of âCode is Law.ââ
The DAOâs crowdfunding campaign launched, and within just 28 days, it raised $150 million in ETH, setting a record for the largest crowdfunding effort at the time. âPeople trust the code,â said an early participant. âThe smart contract is open and anyone can inspect it. This doesnât rely on peopleâs promises; it relies on immutable code.â
However, hidden within this seemingly perfect code was a fatal flaw. On the morning of June 17, 2016, an anonymous hacker discovered a recursive call vulnerability in The DAO contract. Through carefully crafted transactions, the hacker began transferring ETH from The DAO into a sub-DAO. âIn theory, this was entirely within the rules of the contract,â explained a security researcher. âThe hacker didnât âbreakâ the code; he simply exploited an allowed action. From the perspective of âCode is Law,â this was completely âlegal.ââ
However, after over 3.6 million ETH were transferred, the entire Ethereum community faced an unprecedented crisis.
âIf âCode is Law,â then this attack is legal,â one faction argued. âWe cannot change the rules just because we donât like the outcome. This goes against the fundamental principles of decentralization.â
âBut code is meant to serve people,â the opposing faction countered. âIf the code leads to obviously unjust results, we have a responsibility to correct it.â
The intense debate lasted for weeks. Ultimately, Vitalik and the Ethereum core team proposed a hard fork: rolling back the blockchain to return the stolen funds to a new contract.
This decision sparked even greater controversy. Some community members stood by the original chain, leading to the creation of Ethereum Classic (ETC). This was not just a split in the blockchain but also a division in ideology.
âFor many, the pure ideal of âCode is Lawâ was shattered,â lamented an early Ethereum developer. âWe realized that code can never be perfect.â
In the summer of 2020, the crypto world witnessed a new wave of excitement: DeFi Summer. A variety of innovative projects sprang up rapidly: Aaveâs flash loans, Curveâs stablecoin trading, Yearnâs yield aggregation⊠Each project was using code to redefine the possibilities of finance.
But with the enthusiasm came growing risks. âDo you remember YAM?â a DeFi miner recalled. âA small error in the code led to the complete collapse of the governance mechanism. It reminded us that âCode is Lawâ is a double-edged sword. The consequences of code errors can be more severe than human mistakes.â
In early 2022, with the widespread adoption of Web3, DAOs experienced explosive growth, each exploring new possibilities for decentralized collaboration and governance.
âAt first, we thought DAOs were about using token votes to govern organizations with code,â recalled a member of a DAO. âBut soon we realized that reality is much more complicated. Look at the governance process of every major DAOâon the surface, itâs executed through smart contracts, but real decision-making often happens in Discord or forum discussions. These non-code-based political coordinations are actually the core of DAO operations.â
âCode is indeed law, but not the only law,â said a core member of a DAO. âItâs more like a component of a legal system, needing to work in coordination with other partsâcommunity discussions, expert opinions, real-world constraints, etc.â
Just a month ago, Proposal 662 from NounsDAO sparked deeper reflection. While most DAOs relied heavily on human coordination rather than code for their operation, NounsDAO had achieved near-complete operation through smart contract code. However, Proposal 662 suggested registering a DUNA entity in Wyoming, embracing an off-chain legal system.
This sparked heated debate within the community. âWe joined NounsDAO because it proved that a fully code-governed organization was possible!â one member said angrily. âNow you want to replace code with the legal system. Isnât this surrendering to traditional systems?â
âWe canât pretend the real world doesnât exist,â said a supporter of the proposal. âUltimately, DAOs must operate in the real world. A reasonable compromise isnât betrayal of ideals; itâs making them sustainable.â
Support for the proposal grew slowly but steadily, and it passed.
Almost simultaneously, a new participant joined the crypto world: the AI Agent.
In the âCode is Lawâ world, AI found its ideal habitat. The rules here are definite, verifiable, free from human interference, and most importantly, they do not distinguish between humans and AI. Protocols only care about whether the pre-set rules are followed, allowing AI to trade, provide services, and participate in governance autonomously. All decisions and actions can be made through code.
In this crypto world, where code is law and algorithms govern value, AI Agent transitioned for the first time from a piece of code into a presence. As more and more AI Agents join, the crypto world will form a new ecosystem: humans and AI interacting under the same set of rules, creating unprecedented collaboration models.
In 12 days, it will be the 25th anniversary of the publication of Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace. Over the course of these 25 years, âCode is Lawâ has taken an unexpected path. It has transformed from a warning against digital authoritarianism into a symbol of crypto-punk rebellion, and has been continuously tested, adjusted, and evolved in practice. The evolution of this concept mirrors our deepening understanding of the digital world:
Initially, Lessig warned that code could become a tool for controlling cyberspace. This concern remains deeply relevant todayâtechnology companies influence users through algorithms, and in the age of AI, an insecure model could lead to catastrophic results.
Then, the crypto-punks turned this warning into action. Bitcoin demonstrated another possibility: code can not only restrict freedom but also protect it.The DAO incident served as a mirror, reflecting the limitations of pure code governance. But this failure was not an endpoint; it was a new beginning. It prompted us to ask: How should code interact with human society?
The rise of DeFi brought new surprises: in certain scenarios, code can indeed be more effective than traditional rules. Automated market makers, flash loans, and permissionless lending showed the unique advantages of code governance.
The evolution of DAOs is the most enlightening. From the dogmatic âcode-onlyâ approach to seeking a balance with the real world, this process reflects an important reality: at least for now, code cannot replace all other rules, but must coexist and complement them.
The introduction of AI has opened up new possibilities. As artificial intelligence begins to operate autonomously on the blockchain, âCode is Lawâ may gain a new dimension.
Outside the window, the morning fog in San Francisco is dissipating. A new day has begun. In every corner of this world, a blockchain network composed of countless nodes is operating. Smart contracts, like tireless guardians, faithfully execute their missions; DAOs are conducting the largest governance experiment in human history; AI Agents are evolving at a pace beyond human imagination, carving out new forms of existence in the world built by code.
This is the new world created by code. It is imperfect, but full of vitality; it has flaws, but is constantly evolving; it is still young, but already shows the potential to change the world. It carries the promise of making the world more open, transparent, and fair. Although this promise has not yet been fully realized, each participant is pushing this promise step by step toward becoming a reality in their own way.
Perhaps the most profound lesson of âCode is Lawâ over the past 25 years is this: it is not a flawless doctrine, but an ongoing experiment, a process of continuous exploration. In this world constructed by code, people are not only followers of the rules but also creators of the rules. Every line of code written by people is shaping the future of the world.