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by mangeletti
3654 days ago
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> ...as it was meant to be used... Actually, a bug was exploited. By that reasoning, I should be allowed to legally contact Amazon customer service and socially engineer access to others' accounts, then place orders to be shipped to myself. If the customers call and cancel the orders as fraudulent, I should be awarded damages in a lawsuit against them. It's also worth noting that, if you're a person that doesn't have any monetary interest in The DAO, you don't have any right to vote for anything, meaning you're no different than somebody standing near a poker table spouting out your philosophies about where others should put their money (aka in the industry as a railbird). |
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That's called a loophole in a contract, and folks exploit those all the time.
You're on the receiving end, which sucks, but based on the rules of the DAO, you have no recourse.
The entire presupposition, when putting money into this thing, was that the code was the contract. Period.
If you failed to audit the code to find the loophole, you signed on to a financial arrangement without fully understanding the nature of the contract.
If you don't feel you're qualified to evaluate the terms of the contract, maybe we've just discovered a reason why "smart contracts" aren't such a great idea after all...