Preview

Digital Law Journal

Advanced search

Property as the Law of Virtual Things

https://doi.org/10.38044/2686-9136-2023-4-3-16-39

Abstract

Property law in the twentieth century moved from the law of things to the law of rights in things. This was a process of fragmentation: Under Hohfeldian property, we conceive of property as a bundle of sticks, and those sticks can be moved to different holders; the right to possess can be separated from the record ownership right, for example. The downside of Hohfeld’s model is that physical objects — things — become informationally complicated. Thing-ness constrains the extravagances of Hohfeldian property: although we can split off the right to possess from the right to exclude, use, destroy, copy, manage, repair, and so on, there is a gravitational pull to tie these sticks back into a useful bundle centered on the asset, the thing. Correspondingly, there has been an “informational turn” to property law, looking at the ways in which property law serves to limit property forms to reduce search costs, and to identify and celebrate the informational characteristics of thing-ness. The question of thing-ness came to a head in the context of digital and smart assets with the formation of non-fungible tokens. NFTs were attempts to generate and sell “things” a conceptually coherent something that can contain a loose bundle of rights. The project was an attempt to re-create thingness by an amalgam of cryptography, game theory, and intellectual property. This essay discusses thing-ness in the context of digital assets, how simulated thing-ness differs from physical thing-ness, and the problems that arise from attempts to reify digital assets.

About the Author

J. A.T. Fairfield
Washington and Lee University
United States

Juris Doctor (J.D.), William D. Bain Family Professor of Law, School of Law

204 W, Washington St., Lexington, Kentucky, VA 24450



References

1. Davidson, N.M.N. (2008). Standardization and pluralism in property law. Vanderbilt Law Review 61(6). 1597– 1663.

2. Fairfield, J.A.T. (2009). The cost of consent: Optimal standardization in the law of contract. Emory Law Journal, 58. 1401–1458.

3. Fairfield, J.A.T. (2015). Bitproperty. Southern California Law Review, 88. 805–874.

4. Fairfield, J.A.T. (2017). Owned: Property, privacy, and the new digital serfdom. Cambridge University Press.

5. Fairfield, J.A.T. (2022). Tokenized: The law of non-fungible tokens and unique digital property. Indiana Law Journal, 97(4). 1261–1313.

6. Geertz, C. (1973). The interpretation of cultures. Basic Books.

7. Latour, B. (1993). We have never been modern (C. Porter, Trans.). Harvard University Press. (Original work published 1991.)

8. Merrill, T.W., & Smith, H. E. (2000). Optimal standardization in the law of property: The numerus clausus principle. Yale Law Journal, 110. 1–70.

9. Merrill, T.W., & Smith, H. E. (2001). The property/contract interface. Columbia Law Review, 101. 773–852.

10. Moringiello, J.M. (2007). False categories in commercial law: The (ir)relevance of (in)tangibility. Florida State University Law Review, 35(1). 119–166.

11. Noonan, B. (2009). The modernized, streamlined contract. New York State Bar Association Journal, 81. 10–17.

12. Perzanowski, A., & Schultz, J. (2016). The end of ownership: Personal property in the digital economy. MIT Press. 123–125.

13. Smith, H.E. (2012). Property as the law of things. Harvard Law Review, 125(7). 1691–1726.

14. Strahilevitz, L.J. (2005). The right to destroy. Yale Law Journal, 114(4). 781–854.


Review

Views: 1198


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2686-9136 (Online)