Arthur Brock
1 min readFeb 1, 2017

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I don’t know about any distributed governance happening there. I have heard they are decentralizing public records. But as far as I know their governance methods haven’t become P2P or distributed, it’s just they’ve been moving public records onto time-stamped chains. In other words, the county clerk (centralized) still records the deed of your home sale, but instead of it being in a private database, it is hashed to an open immutable record.

If we had this in the U.S. people wouldn’t have to pay LexisNexis a subscription to search public court records which aren’t theirs in the first place.

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Arthur Brock
Arthur Brock

Written by Arthur Brock

Culture hacker, software architect, & targeted currencies geek… Building bridges to the next economy & network society. http://ArtBrock.com

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