What's the best way for a hacker to understand legal requirements?
I'm building in crypto, where KYC/AML become the primary challenges for building interesting things, the tech is the easy part.
I typically bootstrap, try to find product-market fit, then grow. But with the legal challenges, it significantly raises the barrier to entry.
As someone who is a project-based learner, used to diving into the deep end, and figuring everything out — what's the equivalent of that in law? Reading old cases? Reading guidelines from the government? With tech so many people say things that aren't true, then you can go try them for yourself and verify — how do you do this in law?
Hey HN, this is a new open source tool I launched. It's a way to create directories like DMOZ, Awesome Lists, Yahoo Directory and Reddit on the blockchain.
The big idea is when people upvote, everybody who contributed to that content (the submitter, the category creator, even the original person who uploaded it to the blockchain) gets paid.
I know Bitcoin (SV) doesn't have a great reputation on HN, but I'm mostly interested in building new things (like this) and seeing what's possible. Let me know what you think!
I'm building in crypto, where KYC/AML become the primary challenges for building interesting things, the tech is the easy part.
I typically bootstrap, try to find product-market fit, then grow. But with the legal challenges, it significantly raises the barrier to entry.
As someone who is a project-based learner, used to diving into the deep end, and figuring everything out — what's the equivalent of that in law? Reading old cases? Reading guidelines from the government? With tech so many people say things that aren't true, then you can go try them for yourself and verify — how do you do this in law?