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Samer Hassan

Researcher at Complutense University of Madrid

Publications -  58
Citations -  1077

Samer Hassan is an academic researcher from Complutense University of Madrid. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social simulation & Commons. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 58 publications receiving 774 citations. Previous affiliations of Samer Hassan include University of Surrey & Harvard University.

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Blockchain Technology as a Regulatory Technology: From Code is Law to Law is Code

TL;DR: This paper describes the shift from the traditional notion of ‘code is law’ to the new conception of “law is code”, as many contractual transactions get transposed into smart contract code.
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Blockchain Technology as a Regulatory Technology: From Code is Law to Law is Code

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the shift from the traditional notion of "code is law" (i.e. code having the effect of law) to the new conception of "law is code".
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Decentralized Autonomous Organization

TL;DR: The early smart contracts of Era Swap Ecosystem like TimeAlly, Newly Released Tokens (NRT), Assurance, BetDeEx, CertiDapp of Era swap Ecosystem, are deployed on Ethereum mainnet are decentralized finance-oriented (DeFi), i.e. they make non-finance ÐApps costly and it fails to attract users from the centralized counterparts.
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Agent-based modelling and simulation for the analysis of social patterns

TL;DR: This work proposes the use of agent-based graphical modelling languages, which can help to specify social systems as multi-agent systems in a more convenient way, and is complemented with transformation tools to be able to analyse and derive emergent social behavioural patterns by using the capabilities of existing simulation platforms.
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When Ostrom Meets Blockchain: Exploring the Potentials of Blockchain for Commons Governance

TL;DR: In this article, two confronting standpoints dominate the emergent debate around blockchain technologies: 1) the potential of blockchain technologies to enable new forms of governance, and 2) their potential to enable a new form of governance remains largely unexplored.