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Compliance Starting Point: Clarifying the Legal Classification of Smart Contracts in Different Scenarios
Author: Bennett Ma
Introduction
The concept of “Smart Contract” initially described a kind of digital protocol capable of automatic execution. However, when this concept is implemented in practice, people find that this code, which can run automatically, beyond serving as a “contract,” can also become rules for organizational governance, channels for asset transfer, or even tools for illegal activities.
Although smart contracts are not always used as “contracts” in many scenarios, people generally refer to them collectively as “smart contracts.” This indicates that “smart contract” is not a legal concept but a technical concept with various application scenarios. Different scenarios correspond to different social relationships, which, once legally recognized, become legal relationships. Slight variations in scenarios can lead to different social and legal relationships.
Based on this, this article aims to explore the legal characterization of smart contracts under different application scenarios. While it cannot cover all cases, it hopes to help readers gain a basic understanding of relevant legal issues.
Why Clarify the Legal Nature of Smart Contracts? — Characterization Determines Fate
To understand the importance of clarifying the legal nature of smart contracts, there is no better way than to examine real judicial conflicts.
Tornado Cash is a decentralized, non-custodial mixing protocol deployed on Ethereum. Its core consists of a series of immutable smart contracts, allowing users to deposit cryptocurrencies into “fund pools” built by these contracts for mixing, thereby concealing transaction sources and destinations.
Since its creation in 2019, the protocol has been used for money laundering exceeding $7 billion. In August 2022, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), based on an executive order, listed Tornado Cash on the sanctions list. A key point to note is that the executive order stipulates that sanctions must target “property” owned or controlled by “legal entities.”
Additionally, in August 2023, the U.S. Department of Justice also filed criminal charges against the co-founders of Tornado Cash, accusing them of conspiracy to money laundering, conspiracy to violate sanctions, and conspiracy to operate an unlicensed remittance business.
These actions raise several core legal disputes:
The outcome is:
In sanctions rulings, the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in November 2024 ruled that OFAC’s sanctions exceeded its authority. The court’s core view was that “smart contracts” are merely “a neutral, autonomous technical tool” rather than a legal entity, and these “immutable smart contracts” cannot be owned or controlled by any individual or entity, nor can anyone prevent their use. Therefore, they do not meet the traditional legal definition of “property”, and OFAC has no authority to list them for sanctions.
However, regarding developer liability, technological victory does not mean developers can rest easy. Smart contracts are regarded as “the core tools and components of unlicensed money transfer services”, and both the smart contracts and the developers’ actions are characterized as “operation of illegal financial services.” As a result, in the criminal trial at the end of 2024, the founder Roman Storm was convicted of “operating an unlicensed money transfer business.”
The Tornado Cash case clearly demonstrates that the legal characterization of a smart contract may directly determine the direction of the case and the fate of the parties involved. The code itself may be neutral, but those who create, deploy, and participate in it may need to be responsible for its actual impacts and consequences.
This reminds us that careful assessment of the legal nature of “smart contracts” in specific scenarios is no longer optional but an essential requirement for ensuring transaction security and understanding legal risks.
The Legal Nature of Smart Contracts — Scenario-Determined
The legal nature of a smart contract depends on the specific scenario in which it is deployed and operated.
Different scenarios reflect or construct different social relationships, and the law’s evaluation of them varies accordingly, corresponding to different rights, obligations, and responsibilities.
Below, I will present some typical application scenarios:
(1) The legal nature of smart contracts used to construct contracts
When discussing the legal nature of smart contracts, the most common concern is: Can they be recognized and enforced by law? Do they possess contractual legal effect?
When mentioning “contract,” many first think of “consent.” Indeed, using smart contracts for trading digital collectibles is a form of consent; participating in voting decisions within decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) is also a form of consent. However, not all “consent” can constitute a “contract” in legal terms.
“Consent” is a relatively broad concept, similar in meaning to “agreement,” but they cannot be directly equated with “contract.” From a legal perspective, a contract is a subordinate concept of “agreement” or “accord,” characterized by having legal enforceability. While resolutions are also products of agreement, the law often only “confirms” their procedural validity without necessarily granting enforceability.
In simple terms, we can use a streamlined framework to determine whether a smart contract constitutes a “contract”: Contract = Consent + Legality
This framework helps us preliminarily judge whether a specific smart contract application might be recognized as a contract and where its enforceability originates.
For example, we can apply this approach to analyze the following scenarios:
Potential Contract Formation:
Non-Contract Scenarios:
It should be noted that the legality of a smart contract and the legality of the virtual currency involved are two separate issues. Even if the virtual currency is recognized as property, if the contract violates public order, morals, or financial regulation, it may still be invalid.
Furthermore, although some smart contracts may be recognized as contracts, they still possess features different from traditional contracts, such as:
These features profoundly influence the rights, risks, and remedies of the parties.
For example, when a smart contract has technical flaws, the risk attribution requires layered consideration:
(2) The legal nature of smart contracts used to build decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs)
Smart contracts are widely used in DAOs, mainly serving three functions:
1. Defining organizational rules—governing mechanisms, member rights and obligations, decision-making processes;
2. Forming collective resolutions—aggregating member will to make specific decisions;
3. Ensuring automatic execution—implementing rules and resolutions via code.
From a legal characterization perspective, different functions correspond to different legal natures:
In practice, a single smart contract may serve one or multiple of these functions, and its specific characterization should be based on the actual functions and usage scenarios.
(3) The legal nature of smart contracts used for illegal activities such as money laundering
The application of smart contracts in illegal activities is increasingly common, with various complex modes emerging, especially in money laundering. In such cases, the core dispute often does not lie in the legal nature of the smart contract itself but in the potential criminal or administrative liabilities of developers, users, and node participants once used for illegal purposes.
Taking the Tornado Cash case as an example: although the U.S. Treasury’s sanctions were later declared invalid, its developer Roman Storm remains embroiled in legal disputes. Storm was charged with conspiracy to operate an unlicensed remittance business, conspiracy to money laundering, and conspiracy to violate U.S. sanctions against North Korea. On August 6, 2025, a jury in the U.S. federal court in Manhattan found him guilty of “conspiracy to operate an unlicensed remittance business,” with a maximum sentence of five years.
While the post-trial motions filed by Storm’s defense and the prosecution are still pending, the case clearly shows that: In the context of ongoing ambiguity about the legal nature of smart contracts, judicial practice’s expectations of developers’ responsibilities have gone far beyond “maintaining technical neutrality” or “avoiding actual control.”
(4) Smart contracts as objects of intellectual property rights
Today, it is widely accepted that intellectual achievements are protected by law. However, whether smart contracts qualify as objects of intellectual property rights, and what kind of rights they can enjoy (such as copyright, patent, trade secret), still requires specific analysis based on their form, innovation content, and protection intent.
1. Text of smart contracts and copyright
For most programmers, writing smart contract code mainly aims to realize certain functions, not necessarily involving groundbreaking innovation. But this does not mean their intellectual achievements cannot be protected.
Copyright provides a path for protection. Although “works” often evoke books, paintings, etc., it actually protects the expression of intellectual achievements that meet the “work” criteria, not the underlying technical ideas or functional logic. There are no special requirements for the “technical” level of the code.
Therefore, if a smart contract’s code expression meets the criteria of originality, intellectual effort, and tangible fixation, it may be classified as a “work” and enjoy copyright protection.
If a smart contract is recognized as a copyright work, the rights holder automatically enjoys rights such as publication, attribution, modification, reproduction, and communication via information networks.
Copyright arises automatically upon creation, and while registration or timestamping can strengthen proof of ownership, they are not prerequisites for validity.
2. Technical aspects of smart contracts and patents
If a smart contract not only contains code expression but also implements a technically innovative solution, it may be classified as a “patent” and protected via patent rights.
Unlike copyright, patent rights must be applied for, examined, and granted. If the technical solution in a smart contract meets the following three criteria, it may be patentable:
Patents are categorized into inventions, utility models, and designs, each with different scope and application strategies. The core of the patent system is “disclosure in exchange for protection,” meaning applicants must fully disclose their technical content to the public in exchange for exclusive rights for a limited period. This involves higher disclosure requirements and stricter examination but can provide longer and stronger protection.
Deciding whether to apply for a patent for smart contract-related technology should consider factors like the technology’s lifecycle, market competition, and trade secret strategies. Due to the complexity and strategic importance, it is generally advisable to seek professional patent attorney assistance.
3. Information and trade secrets of smart contracts
If the technical solutions or business information in a smart contract do not meet the conditions for patent or copyright protection, or if developers prefer not to disclose their content, they may consider whether it qualifies as a “trade secret.”
If a contract meets the following criteria, it may be classified as a “trade secret” and protected as such:
Trade secrets cover a broad range of technical and business information that is not publicly known, has commercial value, and is kept confidential through appropriate measures. Core algorithms, unique architectures, business logic, or undisclosed parameters within a smart contract can all fall under trade secrets.
Protection of trade secrets does not rely on registration or examination but mainly on internal confidentiality agreements and management. This approach does not require public disclosure but depends heavily on ongoing internal compliance and management to maintain secrecy.
(5) The legal nature of smart contracts in litigation
Because of their transparency and immutable nature, smart contracts are often regarded as ideal electronic evidence. However, in legal practice, using them as evidence is more complex than traditional forms. This complexity mainly arises from the following technical features:
Smart contracts are written in code language. On one hand, the technical complexity and specialization increase the cost of understanding and argumentation in litigation, requiring more resources from authorities and parties to interpret. On the other hand, code cannot fully and clearly express all of the parties’ true intentions as natural language does, and parties may reach agreements outside the code. Therefore, smart contracts often cannot serve as sole basis for judgment and need to be corroborated with other evidence.
Smart contracts have anonymity. In many cases, the identities of the involved parties are difficult to trace directly. Although in major criminal cases like money laundering, authorities can use technical means to break anonymity, in many civil or non-criminal disputes, identity recognition remains a significant challenge.
Smart contracts operate on decentralized architectures. Their execution does not depend on a single central authority, which makes responsibility attribution difficult in disputes—the code author, deployer, node participants, etc., may all be involved, but clear legal rules for responsibility are lacking.
Therefore, although the evidentiary effectiveness of smart contracts has not been legally denied, and issues like burden of proof are still within traditional rules, their technical language and operational mechanisms require higher professional standards in judicial review and recognition.
Compliance Recommendations for Participants
Given the complexity of the legal nature of smart contracts, at least the following points should be considered:
Conclusion
Real-world scenarios and legal practice are far more complex than what is presented here. Therefore, I do not claim to “clarify” all legal issues in this article. Instead, I hope to promote legal awareness and convey the following ideas:
In facing the complexity of smart contract applications, we should abandon the simplistic view of “code is law” and instead adopt a more nuanced, more pragmatic “scenario-based analysis” perspective. Only through this approach can we embrace technological innovation while clearly delineating rights and responsibilities, managing benefits and risks.