Code as law: Difference between revisions
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This is the springboard for '''the {{meta|Missions directory|mission}} on code as law''', covering concepts in the vein of {{wp|Lawrence Lessig}}'s well-known maxim that "code is law"<ref>Lawrence Lessig on the increasing regulation of cyberspace. Harvard Magazine, January 2000. [//archive.ph/Xnspc Archived] from [//www.harvardmagazine.com/2000/01/code-is-law-html the original] on 30 April 2022.</ref>. Articles pertaining to this mission will carry the mission banner {{t|mission/code as law}}. | This is the springboard for '''the {{meta|Missions directory|mission}} on code as law''', covering concepts in the vein of {{wp|Lawrence Lessig}}'s well-known maxim that "code is law"<ref>Lawrence Lessig on the increasing regulation of cyberspace. Harvard Magazine, January 2000. [//archive.ph/Xnspc Archived] from [//www.harvardmagazine.com/2000/01/code-is-law-html the original] on 30 April 2022.</ref>. Articles pertaining to this mission will carry the mission banner {{t|mission/code as law}}. It is part of the broader mission on [[software sociology]]. | ||
==Articles== | ==Articles== |
Revision as of 05:05, 15 February 2023
This is the springboard for the mission on code as law, covering concepts in the vein of Lawrence Lessig's well-known maxim that "code is law"[1]. Articles pertaining to this mission will carry the mission banner mission/code as law
. It is part of the broader mission on software sociology.
Articles
References
- ↑ Lawrence Lessig on the increasing regulation of cyberspace. Harvard Magazine, January 2000. Archived from the original on 30 April 2022.