This makes some sense. Unfortunately that is virtually impossible to work and pretty soon it would be a complete cesspool.
Well look how well it worked for the utubes and file-download sites of the world.
New laws got passed that basically assume guilt until proven innocent or some such weirdness, in the sense that nowadays you might not anymore be able to just say you will remove any copyright-violating or intellectual-property violating or illegal material upon receipt of a court order? Instead now folks can just demand you remove it without even first having a judge ascertain they are within their rights to have it removed?
Or are the new "takedown notice" things actual real court orders?
Because allowing
OTdemo Open Transactions server to demo the ability of anyone to issue any asset at any time seems likely to lead to some pornographic, hate-literature, racist, unregulated, illegal, intellectual property violating, copyright-infringing, rights of publicity infringing, etc etc etc assets, I am trying taking the position that as I am not a lawyer, and trolls making false accusations are extremely common and likely, it makes little sense for me to do a takedown that isn't court-ordered unless I am moved by some whim or mood or quirk of fate or act of deity or force majeure etc to do so.
I really am not educated enough in all the laws of this planet's various jurisdictions to determine which exactly among numerous pseudonymous identities are or are not permitted to play ruler of a nation or CEO of a corporation or interplanetary securities dealer or whatever their game is in which games where when and how.
However I do know that
DeVCoins are intended to help raise money for software development so I don't really see yet any good reason why they should not be used to encourage playtesting of the Open Transactions platform by having them be used to reward players for playing, such as buying and selling various virtual articles with them. If people come up with interesting and potentially useful new free open source contracts for example are they not contributing thereby to free open source development?
Bitcoins though, hmm, are bitcoins really so very different that they ought not be permitted?
-MarkM-