Follow the law, get rich, change the law, vs break the law, go to jail, lose it all

in politics •  7 years ago  (edited)

Strategic compliance vs strategic non-compliance

There seems to be different strategies which people take regardless of their political beliefs. The legitimacy strategy involves following the law, get rich while following the law, and then change the law. If we look at for example Microsoft, Google or Facebook, we will see that they follow the laws of the countries they operate in and make profit. When they become big enough then they begin to lobby to change laws to protect their strategic interests and ability to make future profits.

In a sense, on a level of the individual, we can see there is the path where the individual complies with the law to reduce their own risks. The risk of losing their wealth, which could be time, health, beauty, monetary, social, whatever it is that they have that they do not want to lose. When the individual does not comply with the law, the social norms of their community, the ethics of their neighbors, then they increase the risk of their wealth being lost.

Of course not all individuals take this course and some individuals choose to break the laws. In most cases these are individuals who don't have a lot to lose (desperation), or who are young (inexperienced), and typically the more an individual has to lose in their life the less of certain kinds of risks they can take.

This doesn't mean that the laws are just or that we must agree with the laws to comply with them

The main point is compliance is a strategy, a means to an end, and the individual or corporation does not need to agree with the laws in order to see it's more pragmatic (cheaper) for the business or personal life to comply. This isn't always going to be the case and if the laws become more expensive to comply with than to break (if the individual or business has more to lose complying than breaking the law), then the pragmatic thing to do would be to violate the law. So compliance is not absolute, and is merely a cost reduction strategy. It reduces legal fees, it reduces healthcare expenses, it reduces costs across the board, and that is why most people in the world comply.

But to comply doesn't mean to agree with it. It's no different than if you export your franchise to a foreign country which has laws you don't care for or understand. If you want your company to be profitable in that foreign country then you'll comply with the laws of that foreign country or there is no way your company will be profitable due to fines, legal fees, boycotts, etc. The same holds true for crypto projects, where in some cases it is a grey area where it is clearly not a matter of ethics, but of public perception.

Assume the mainstream demographic has a perception of a crypto project as "good" or "evil". Assume most crypto projects want to be perceived as "good". If the crypto project wants to be perceived as "good" by the mainstream demographic of society then it has to appeal to the sensibilities of that demographic. On the other hand some crypto projects definitely do not appeal to the mainstream but still have value because they appeal to the norms of certain subcultures which perceive the crypto project as "good". So as long as some demographic perceives your project as "good" the project will have it's supporters, but if the goal is to be profitable and not just useful then it requires growth, and growth requires mainstream demographics.

Steemit is a good example of this kind of project which is appealing to the mainstream. I don't particularly agree with some of the radical decisions myself such as having the wallet amounts transparent with no privacy, or having certain hard forks, but I realize these may be necessary for attracting mainstream users. Mainstream users who are going to comply with their local government, who want to be kept safe, who don't want to manage private keys, who don't want to be a crypto-anarchist, or a cypherpunk or a computer nerd, but who just want to blog and make money, have fun, make friends. The majority of profits come growth, which comes from the majority of people.

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Fantastic post. Well thought out. I work in compliance for a company and certainly one of the main costs of NOT complying with the law is the potential PR damage caused. Unless of course the general population agrees with you, then the PR damage would be limited.

As for the laws and regulations pertaining to this crypto world, the regulators don't like looking foolish, but they do understand by its very nature, it can't be controlled.
I am certainly following you now and look forward to more posts like this. I've only been on Steem for a month and love love love the content. No more having to see cheeky tweets or my niece's kindergarten graduation photo. So long facebook!

Don't do the crime if you can't do the time.

Hi Dana, we need more people like you with the power of nuance. To me, Larken Rose is a hero. I'm sure you know about his books, documentaries and such. Here's my favourite short doc:

I 100% agree with you there!

Btw, for banks this is the businessmodel: violate the law as much as possible, pay for the slap on the wrists and make billions...

Welcome to steemit community

I've been here longer than you lol. Do you bot much?

LOL

I guess we are better off being compliant and being safe and not weary about drastically losing money but if people play is risky, it is a gamble that can pay off or as you said they can lose everything.

Not just money, wealth. If you have a social life it could be lost, include friends, family, partner, etc, if you have certain freedoms you cherish they could also be lost, it's not just the monetary aspects at stake.

Anything which you value which society can take away.

I find myself in agreement with your entire post, as such you've been upvoted, resteemed and followed. Thank you in advance for your continued contributions!

thank you very much~~~

@dana-edwards really good post love to read more great work

I fully agree, it's important to be attractive for the mainstream users, therefor it must be made easy for them. ''Plug and play'' is key to success, people nowadays are way too impatient and lazy.

I like the way that chosed the title of this article
seems professional

I love the phrase, and agree with it 100%. Not obeying the rules later leads to complications that can cripple a company. The bigger your company gets, the bigger the risk gets.

Yes, good stuff. This a a good step towards making steem 100$. Because, more people are to steem power what steempower is to steemit users. And what then of the quote "if a law is unjust, a man is not only right to disobey it, he is obligated to do so" ? Your saying this is still the case, but you play the long game. The chess match?

A man has a right to get shot but it doesn't mean it's wise to ask for a bullet. Sometimes following the law is the path to receiving a bullet and it would be wise to break the law. Other times not following the law is the path to receiving a bullet and it would be wise to follow the law.

So the only thing you need to do is find ways not to receive a bullet. If that means following the law then follow it and if it means breaking the law then break it. That is a metaphor for effective pragmatism and effective altruism. Yes I play the long game, and if I didn't I wouldn't be here for very long.

Indeed, dilemma of to follow the law or to break it is about agreement in price you pay for breaking the law and disagreement beetween value of assets your have and you probably will have.

The people that creates these laws are the same people that keeps us ignorant about the law. Passing bills that only attorneys or law students can understand is no accident.

Congress is purposefully stuffing bills with technical mumbo jumbo as to keep normal people from noticing the crimes that they commit themselves.

Build AI which can profit on your behalf whilst following the laws which are too complex for you to understand.

@dana-edwards Steemit is one of the few projects in the crypto world that attracts people with no knowledge about cryptocurrencies. It is indeed appealing to the mainstream because it is so easy to participate and let's not forget the monetary incentive :)

Only after they join Steemit, they start to research cryptocurrencies and learn about it. So in a way Steemit is paving the way for crypto mass adoption.

I think most people will never care about crypto just like most people don't care about smtp, or dht, but they all use it if they did file sharing, Bittorent, Email. The mainstream are not computer nerds and will not take the time to learn how the blockchain works. They'll blog, make money, shop, and have fun.

The cronies in Washington want CONTROL. Power and control are their currencies - and bitcoin/altcoins are a threat to that power. Who needs Federal Reserve Notes when we can have Bitcoin?

The way to have a proper government? Thomas Jefferson said it best...

"The way to have good and safe government, is not to trust it all to one, but to divide it among the many, distributing to every one exactly the functions he is competent to. Let the national government be entrusted with the defense of the nation, and its foreign and federal relations; the State governments with the civil rights, law, police, and administration of what concerns the State generally; the counties with the local concerns of the counties, and each ward direct the interests within itself. It is by dividing and subdividing these republics from the great national one down through all its subordinations, until it ends in the administration of every man's farm by himself; by placing under every one what his own eye may superintend, that all will be done for the best. What has destroyed liberty and the rights of man in every government which has ever existed under the sun? The generalizing and concentrating all cares and powers into one body." (Works 6:543; P.P.N.S., p. 125)

Congratulations @dana-edwards
You took 94 place in my Top 100 of posts