Abstract
The emergence of Web3 technologies, including distributed ledger technology (DLT), smart contracts, digital assets, and artificial intelligence (AI), has revolutionized global commerce by enabling decentralized, automated, and borderless transactions. However, their integration into traditional legal systems presents significant challenges, including disruptions to digital assets and contract formation in common and civil law jurisdictions, enforceability issues in civil law systems, jurisdictional conflicts in cross-border transactions, and normative deficiencies in the "code is law" paradigm. These challenges, compounded by a fragmented global regulatory landscape, threaten legal certainty, compliance, and innovation. This article proposes the Universal Digital Law Codex (UDLC) as a comprehensive legal framework developed as a first draft 3 by Andreas Furrer, Wulf Kaal, and Stephan D. Meyer. 4 UDLC addresses these issues and fosters a robust infrastructure for the digital era. UDLC integrates DLT, AI, and quantum computing into existing legal systems through minimum legal requirements, dynamic compliance mechanisms, and decentralized dispute resolution, ensuring smart contracts align with common and civil law principles. By promoting legal interoperability, respecting jurisdictional diversity, and embedding decentralized governance, UDLC mitigates cross-jurisdictional conflicts and overcomes the limitations of "code is law." Drawing on a critical analysis of global regulatory initiatives, such as UNCITRAL's Model Laws, and exemplified by its application in decentralized dispute resolution mechanisms, this study demonstrates UDLC's transformative potential to ensure legal certainty, trust, and sustainable growth in Web3 markets across diverse legal systems.