Vermont Considering to Employ Blockchain to Manage State Records
As it look for ways to utilize new innovations for its own record keeping applications, the State of Vermont has asked experts to submit a report on the blockchain technology. The request, signed by the state governor himself, has directed the Secretary of State, the Commissioner of Financial Regulation, and an Attorney General to consult with the delegates of the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws and the Center for Legal Innovation at Vermont Law School, while creating a report that elaborately discusses the risks and benefits associated with the blockchain....
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Vermont has recently taken some legislative steps that could see the state using Bitcoin’s technology for state records, smart contracts and other applications in a drive to become “a leader in the field.” On June 3, 2015 Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin signed into law “No. 51. An act relating to promoting economic development. (S.138),” which contained “Sec. A.3. Study and Report; Blockchain Technology.” This mandates that a report be written by January 15, 2016, which has “… finding(s) and recommendations on the potential opportunities and risks of creating a presumption of validity for....
The cost of using an implementation of the blockchain for a public records management system would outweigh any potential benefits, a report prepared for Vermont’s state legislature concludes. The report, commissioned as part of a broader legislative effort aimed at promoting economic growth, was prepared by Vermont's Secretary of State, Attorney General, and the Department of Financial Regulation. Representatives from the Center for Legal Innovation at Vermont Law School and the Uniform Law Commission also contributed to the report, which was delivered to the legislature on 15th January.
A report on the use of blockchain technology as a mechanism for storing state records is set to be delivered to the Vermont legislature by 15th January. According to a summary of the bill, the study is intended to explore "opportunities and risks" for storing electronic facts using blockchain technology. The final version of the bill also requires that the report focus on addressing "unresolved regulatory issues". The mandate for the study was part of an economic development bill signed into law last summer by Governor Peter Shumlin. The law instructs the state's Attorney General, the....
Bitcoin ATMs have been a growing market worldwide as Bitcoin slowly and consistently gains popularity, and many parts of the United States have joined the technology revolution. Some states in the union are more interested and accommodating than others. New Hampshire has been very pro-Bitcoin within their state's regulatory framework. It appears that their western next door neighbor, Vermont, is not so much. Vermont goes from Hero to Zero. At the heart of the matter is being licensed by the state of Vermont to operate a Bitcoin ATM. Blu-Bin/PYC has been running this Bitcoin ATM at a Church....
A legislative effort in the state of Vermont to recognize blockchain data in the court system is inching closer to completion, and only needs a governor’s signature to become enshrined in law. Buried inside an economic development bill recently passed by both the Vermont House and Senate is legislative language that, if approved, would make it so that "a fact or record" verified through blockchain technology is "authentic". Put more simply, a document notarized using a network like the bitcoin blockchain will have more legal bearing in court. This use case has emerged....