UNDEAD seems super interesting. I just looked at a bunch of emails from the 
archive, but how did that end up? Was the contract ever revealed?

> On Oct 27, 2018, at 6:54 PM, Kerim Aydin <ke...@u.washington.edu> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>> On Sat, 27 Oct 2018, ais...@alumni.bham.ac.uk wrote:
>>> On Sat, 2018-10-27 at 15:30 -0700, Kerim Aydin wrote:
>>>> On Sat, 27 Oct 2018, Kerim Aydin wrote: 
>>>> On another subject, since ATMunn's judgement brought it up, I've been
>>>> thinking since our previous contract about what would happen if we put
>>>> out a hashed contract, with one of the clauses being "the parties won't
>>>> reveal the text of this contract", then claiming in public that it
>>>> gives various powers etc.
>>>> 
>>>> Worth testing?
>> 
>> That would presumably be similar to the old UNDEAD contract.
>> 
>> Presumably, you're still unwilling to reveal the details of what it
>> entailed. If so, that would imply that it's still being treated as
>> binding by its participants, so maybe it's once again a contract in the
>> Agoran-legal sense. (This argument might break down, though, e.g.
>> perhaps you'd keep it secret not because you had to, but because the
>> sense of mystery surrounding it is more interesting than the fairly
>> banal truth behind it.)
> 
> Sorta similar!  Not quite though.
> 
> The UNDEAD contract doesn't do anything that outsiders needed to track
> directly, such as whether the contract grants any act-on-behalf powers.
> (I think I'm allowed to make general statements like that - I hope so!)
> It governs members' actions and membership is secret, so when it came
> out it was sorta like a game of werewolf (e.g. "which one of us is a
> member?  is that person doing those actions to support the UNDEAD
> agenda"?)  IIRC no-one with standing (i.e. no member) ever brought a
> breach-of-contract case against another member.
> 
> So in that sense it tested whether the Courts of the time could compel
> the revelation of a private agreement (which they couldn't), but didn't
> test whether Rules-granted abilities that impacted a recordkeepor (like
> act-on-behalf) required transparency to be effective.
> 
> 
> 

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