He didn't 'try', he (or she) did. And he could because it was allowed, intent or not.
> Well, the Ethereum community can also do something that was neither intended nor planned for.
Of course they can. And that will make the whole concept moot.
> You say that doing so would be a breach of contract. I say: Well, go ahead and sue me.
No-one will. But then also: no-one will ever trust the concept. It either works or it does not, you can't say it works and if it doesn't we'll fork. That's simply institutionalizing unreliability.
The attacker has - very elegantly - pointed out a major flaw in the whole thing in a way that not much else could have: in the end we all have to either trust some higher power to interpret the context in which a contract was drawn up or we will have to live by the letter of the contracts. You can't have it both ways.
I believe ethereum is dead, but I also believe that a better implementation of the idea has merits. So long term I'm optimistic but it would have been better if DAO had been a bit more conservative before taking on substantial outside involvement. Overselling something is never good.
> Well, the Ethereum community can also do something that was neither intended nor planned for.
Of course they can. And that will make the whole concept moot.
> You say that doing so would be a breach of contract. I say: Well, go ahead and sue me.
No-one will. But then also: no-one will ever trust the concept. It either works or it does not, you can't say it works and if it doesn't we'll fork. That's simply institutionalizing unreliability.
The attacker has - very elegantly - pointed out a major flaw in the whole thing in a way that not much else could have: in the end we all have to either trust some higher power to interpret the context in which a contract was drawn up or we will have to live by the letter of the contracts. You can't have it both ways.