An Arizona lawmaker wants to protect blockchain node operators from possible prohibitions by local and county governments.
The bill, submitted on Feb. 6 to the Arizona House of Representatives, states that âa city or town may not prohibit or otherwise restrict an individual from running a node on blockchain technology in a residence.â It includes another section which applies to any possible county-level regulations that could be crafted, with both elements stating that such rule-making would be a state issue rather than a local one.
Itâs not entirely clear whether the bill is aimed directly at cryptocurrency miners specifically or all nodes. Nodes are the key infrastructure layer for such networks, with each maintaining a copy of the blockchainâs transaction history that can then be shared from node to node in a peer-to-peer fashion.
âFor the purposes of this section, ârunning a node on blockchain technologyâ means providing computing power to validate or encrypt transactions in blockchain technology,â the bill states.
The measure was put forward by Arizona State Representative Jeff Weninger (R-Chandler), the author of a 2017 bill enshrining the legality of blockchain signatures and smart contracts under state law. Weningerâs bill attracted broad support within the stateâs legislature, and it was formally signed into law by Governor Doug Ducey on March 29 of last year.
Public records indicate that the measure has since been passed to the Houseâs Rules and Commerce committees for further deliberation.
Arizona house chamber image via Shutterstock