‘Unworkable’ bill to ban blockchain immutability is introduced in Illinois

A recently introduced Illinois Senate Bill has been ridiculed by the crypto community over its “unworkable” plans to force blockchain miners and validators to do “impossible things” โ€” such as reversing transactions if ordered to do so by a state court.

The Senate Bill was quietly introduced into the Illinois legislature on Feb. 9 by Illinois Senator Robert Peters but appears to have been only recently noticed by Florida-based lawyer Drew Hinkes who discussed the bill in a Twitter post on Feb. 19.

The bill titled the โ€œDigital Property Protection and Law Enforcement Act,โ€ would authorize the courts โ€” upon a valid request from the Attorney General or a State’s Attorney that is made pursuant to the laws of Illinois โ€” to order a blockchain transaction that is executed via a smart contract to be altered or rescinded.

The act would apply to any “blockchain network that processes a blockchain transaction originating in the State.”

Senator Robert Peterโ€™s bill to ban immutability on blockchains. Source: Illinois General Assembly.

Hinkes described the bill as โ€œthe most unworkable state lawโ€ related to blockchain and cryptocurrency that he has ever seen.

“This is a stunning reverse course for a state that was previously pro -innovation. Instead we now get possibly the most unworkable state law related to #crypto and #blockchain Iโ€™ve ever seen,” he said.

The bill states that any blockchain miners and validators may be fined between $5,000-10,000 for each day that they fail to comply with court orders.

While acknowledging the need to implement bills that strengthen consumer protection, Hinkes said it would be โ€œimpossibleโ€ for miners and validators to comply with the bill proposed by Senator Peters.

Hinkes was also shocked to see that โ€œno defenseโ€ would be available to miners or validators that operated on a blockchain network that โ€œhas not adopted reasonable available proceduresโ€ to comply with the court orders.

The bill also appears to mandate “any person using a smart contract to deliver goods and services” to include code in the smart contract which can be used to comply with court orders.

โ€œAny person using a smart contract to deliver goods or services in this State shall include smart contract code capable of enforcing court orders regarding the smart contract.โ€

Other members of the cryptocurrency community have responded with similar ridicule of the bill proposed by Peters.

Crypto analyst โ€œfoobarโ€ noted to his 120,800 Twitter followers on Feb. 19 that court ordered transactions would need to โ€” somehow โ€” be amended โ€œwithout needing the private keyโ€ of the participants, which he considered to be โ€œhilarious.โ€

Gabriel Shapiro, lawyer and general counsel at investment firm Delphi Labs explained very briefly to his 34,100 Twitter followers on Feb. 19 that the bill would essentially try to ban immutability on blockchains:

Meanwhile, Carla Reyes, assistant professor at Southern Methodist University School of Law in a Feb. 19 tweet, statedย that lawmakers should only introduce bills if they understand how the technology works.

While immutability is a common property in blockchains and distributed ledgers, the Peters-sponsored bill explained that such networks lack an enforcement mechanism that can be tapped into by the courts:

โ€œAs a result, the cost to enforce legal rights in digital property is often prohibitive such that the property rights cannot be vindicated and the vast majority of blockchain crimes go unpunished.โ€

Fraud and mistake would be two of the most commonly used cases where Illinois courts may order for a blockchain transaction to the victim or original sender, the bill noted.

The bill also wants to help users recover their assets if they lose their private keys.

Related: What is blockchain technology? How does it work?

While the bill was only introduced on Feb. 9, it will need to be “read” and voted in by three separate committee hearings before being passed on to Illinois Governor Jay Pritzker to officially sign the bill into law.

The first reading took place on the same day it was introduced into the Illinois General Assembly by Peters.

If it is ever passed, the contents of the bill would take effect 30 days after becoming law.