https://twitter.com/antonioregalado/status/631840159466696704

citing
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/540151/bitcoins-dark-side-could-get-darker/

Partial quote:"Some of the earliest adopters of the digital currency Bitcoin 
were criminals, who have found it invaluable in online marketplaces for 
contraband and as payment extorted through lucrative “ransomware” that holds 
personal data hostage. A new Bitcoin-inspired technology that some investors 
believe will be much more useful and powerful may be set to unlock a new wave 
of criminal innovation.That technology is known as smart contracts—small 
computer programs that can do things like execute financial trades or notarize 
documents in a legal agreement. Intended to take the place of third-party human 
administrators such as lawyers, which are required in many deals and 
agreements, they can verify information and hold or use funds using similar 
cryptography to that which underpins Bitcoin.Some companies think smart 
contracts could make financial markets more efficient, or simplify complex 
transactions such as property deals (see “The Startup Meant to Reinvent What 
Bitcoin Can Do”). Ari Juels, a cryptographer and professor at the Jacobs 
Technion-Cornell Institute at Cornell Tech, believes they will also be useful 
for illegal activity–and, with two collaborators, he has demonstrated how.“In 
some ways this is the perfect vehicle for criminal acts, because it’s meant to 
create trust in situations where otherwise it’s difficult to achieve,” says 
Juels.In a paper to be released today, Juels, fellow Cornell professor Elaine 
Shi, and University of Maryland researcher Ahmed Kosba present several examples 
of what they call “criminal contracts.” They wrote them to work on the recently 
launched smart-contract platform Ethereum.One example is a contract offering a 
cryptocurrency reward for hacking a particular website. Ethereum’s programming 
language makes it possible for the contract to control the promised funds. It 
will release them only to someone who provides proof of having carried out the 
job, in the form of a cryptographically verifiable string added to the defaced 
site.Contracts with a similar design could be used to commission many kinds of 
crime, say the researchers. Most provocatively, they outline a version designed 
to arrange the assassination of a public figure. A person wishing to claim the 
bounty would have to send information such as the time and place of the killing 
in advance. The contract would pay out after verifying that those details had 
appeared in several trusted news sources, such as news wires. A similar 
approach could be used for lesser physical crimes, such as high-profile 
vandalism.“It was a bit of a surprise to me that these types of crimes in the 
physical world could be enabled by a digital system,” says Juels. He and his 
coauthors say they are trying to publicize the potential for such activity to 
get technologists and policy makers thinking about how to make sure the 
positives of smart contracts outweigh the negatives.“We are optimistic about 
their beneficial applications, but crime is something that is going to have to 
be dealt with in an effective way if those benefits are to bear fruit,” says 
Shi.Nicolas Christin, an assistant professor at Carnegie Mellon University who 
has studied criminal uses of Bitcoin, agrees there is potential for smart 
contracts to be embraced by the underground. “It will not be surprising,” he 
says. “Fringe businesses tend to be the first adopters of new technologies, 
because they don’t have anything to lose.”[end of partial quote]

Reply via email to