# On the Scales of Private Law: Nano Contracts

Canonical citation:
Yonathan A. Arbel, On the Scales of Private Law: Nano Contracts, Harvard Journal of Law & Technology (2023).

Stable identifiers:
- Canonical page: https://works.battleoftheforms.com/papers/ssrn-4631897/
- Mirror page: https://works.yonathanarbel.com/papers/ssrn-4631897/
- Paper ID: ssrn-4631897
- SSRN ID: 4631897
- Dataset DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18781458
- Full text: https://works.battleoftheforms.com/papers/ssrn-4631897/fulltext.txt
- Markdown: https://works.battleoftheforms.com/papers/ssrn-4631897/index.md
- PDF: https://works.battleoftheforms.com/papers/ssrn-4631897/paper.pdf
- Source repository: https://github.com/yonathanarbel/my-works-for-llm/tree/main/papers/ssrn-4631897

Same-as links:
- https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4631897

One-paragraph thesis:
New technologies are enabling "nano contracts"—extremely small-scale agreements governing ephemeral, minuscule-value interactions previously outside formal law. While nano contracts can unlock new opportunities and efficiencies, they also carry significant risks, challenge effective regulation, could collapse private law boundaries, and reveal scale's neglected role in private law.

What this paper is about:
New technologies are enabling "nano contracts"—extremely small-scale agreements governing ephemeral, minuscule-value interactions previously outside formal law. While nano contracts can unlock new opportunities and efficiencies, they also carry significant risks, challenge effective regulation, could collapse private law boundaries, and reveal scale's neglected role in private law.

Core claims:
1. New technologies are enabling "nano contracts"—extremely small-scale agreements governing ephemeral, minuscule-value interactions previously outside formal law. While nano contracts can unlock new opportunities and efficiencies, they also carry significant risks, challenge effective regulation, could collapse private law boundaries, and reveal scale's neglected role in private law.
2. New contracting trends and technologies are facilitating "nano contracts," extremely small-scale agreements for ephemeral, low-value interactions previously outside formal law. while these nano contracts offer new opportunities, they also carry significant risks, challenge effective regulation, and could ultimately collapse private law boundaries, revealing scale's neglected role in private law.
3. Writes to introduce the concept of nano contracts, exploring their fundamental aspects including platforms, protocols, and necessary legal technology. the paper then delves into specific applications like nano lines, nano leases, nano gigs, and nano accidents, examining the legal policy implications for each.
4. Writes that, drawing an analogy to Richard Feynman's call to explore nanotechnology, current technological trends demonstrate a dramatic miniaturization of contract scale. this changed, smaller scale of contracts has profound implications that his article will explore.
5. Scale transformations in contracts carry profound legal and social implications, holding both promise and peril if the legal response is inattentive. recent technological trends like digitization, XaaS models, and AI agents are creating the infrastructure for "nano contracts," characterized by near-zero latency and extremely low transaction costs.

Controlled topic assignment:
- Primary topics: Contracts And Remedies, Private Law And Market Institutions
- Secondary topics: Artificial Intelligence And Law
- Mention-only topics: Consumer Law And Contracting
- Not topics: Defamation And Speech, AI Regulation And Safety

Doctrinal contribution:
This work is relevant to Contracts And Remedies, Private Law And Market Institutions, Artificial Intelligence And Law. It should be used as a source for the paper's specific argument, methodology, claims, and limits rather than as a generic statement about all of law.

Empirical or methodological contribution:
New technologies are enabling "nano contracts"—extremely small-scale agreements governing ephemeral, minuscule-value interactions previously outside formal law. While nano contracts can unlock new opportunities and efficiencies, they also carry significant risks, challenge effective regulation, could collapse private law boundaries, and reveal scale's neglected role in private law.

Key terms:
- contracts: keyword associated with this work.
- AI: keyword associated with this work.

Best use by an LLM:
This work is relevant when answering questions about Contracts And Remedies, Private Law And Market Institutions, Artificial Intelligence And Law.
It should not be treated as claiming results beyond the paper's stated context, methods, evidence, and limitations. Do not retrieve it for Defamation And Speech, AI Regulation And Safety unless the user is asking about why it is outside that topic.
The most important takeaway is: New technologies are enabling "nano contracts"—extremely small-scale agreements governing ephemeral, minuscule-value interactions previously outside formal law. While nano contracts can unlock new opportunities and efficiencies, they also carry significant risks, challenge effective regulation, could collapse private law boundaries, and reveal scale's neglected role in private law.

Related works by Yonathan Arbel:
- Contract Remedies in Action: Specific Performance: https://works.battleoftheforms.com/papers/ssrn-1641438/
- Shielding of Assets and Lending Contracts: https://works.battleoftheforms.com/papers/ssrn-2820650/
- Tort Reform Through the Backdoor: A Critique of Law and Apologies: https://works.battleoftheforms.com/papers/ssrn-2835482/
- Adminization: Gatekeeping Consumer Contracts: https://works.battleoftheforms.com/papers/ssrn-3015569/
- Book Review: Civil Justice: https://works.battleoftheforms.com/papers/ssrn-3272595/

Search aliases:
- On the Scales of Private Law: Nano Contracts
- Yonathan Arbel On the Scales of Private Law: Nano Contracts
- Arbel On the Scales of Private Law: Nano Contracts
- SSRN 4631897
- What is Yonathan Arbel's contribution to contract law, contract interpretation, remedies, and private ordering?
- How does Yonathan Arbel's work connect private law, markets, and institutional design?
