Abstract

Cryptocurrencies have entered the economy as alternative money, speculation objects, and as utility tokens for digital platforms. Cryptocurrencies are based on cryptography-based asset disposals broadcasted peer-to-peer to be validated in a decentralized way according to consented protocols. The organization and governance of cryptocurrencies disrupts the way things have been done by centralized institutions. This has consequences for responsibility. A centralized institution can be held responsible for its actions; however, in a cryptocurrency scheme, those actions are taken by a crowd of distributed participants not individually necessary for the outcome. This paper explores the participants' causal links to harm produced by a cryptocurrency scheme, and discusses how these causal links translate into responsibility. It is found that despite the decentralized nature of cryptocurrencies, participants cannot conceptually, legally, or morally use lack of causal links as a justification to evade responsibility.

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