Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: [ANN][CRW] CROWN (SHA256) | NEW UPDATE! | Experimental Commodity | Trons |
by
btct22
on 21/09/2017, 07:24:16 UTC
How does it work legally with network interconnections like the internet and these kinds of laws eg https://www.translegal.com/lesson/6024 - could Crown be seen as an ISP of sorts?  Or a similar thing with the big international interconnects of cables and satellites and agreements regarding liability of content and users actions etc.

And who pays for the non-profits to operate, is that a "network service" or is that what the masternodes rewards will be for and node operators pay to set up a template organisation and run it?

I've just read more of the white papers, but it's still not clear to me how the node applications work.  Are they written in a specific language and run on a JIT compiler, or is it more of a Docker or hypervisor environment where there's VMs that do stuff and licence and pay for themselves and their resource usage in Crown?  

Also have you looked at the way SIA coin contracts work between the customer and the storage provider, I think they are bilateral in nature and pretty interesting.  Also the way SIA encrypts content would prevent a storage provider from knowing what was on their hard drives, so they probably couldn't be found liable for a user backing up a copy of a movie.