Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 163— - RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, COMPETITION, AND INNOVATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VI— - MISCELLANEOUS SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PROVISIONS › Part Part B— - National Science and Technology Strategy › § 19222
The Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy must create a national plan for research and development of distributed ledger technology, including public and permissionless ledgers. The plan must be made with the National Science and Technology Council, other federal agencies, and outside experts as needed. Defined terms used in the law: Director (head of OSTP); distributed ledger (a shared, synchronized record stored across networked nodes); distributed ledger technology (the tools that run those ledgers); institution of higher education (as defined in federal law); smart contract (a program on a ledger that runs when conditions are met); relevant congressional committees (Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation; House Science, Space, and Technology). The Director must look at current federal programs that fund research, consider possible benefits such as lower transaction costs, better privacy and data control, improved interoperability, security and transparency, smart contracts, new governance and ownership models, and greater inclusion of underrepresented groups, and weigh risks like software bugs, low consumer knowledge, use in illicit finance, fraud, governance issues, foreign activity, and environmental or economic impacts. The plan must also consider how ledgers could help federal services, suggest ways to promote research and voluntary technical standards, identify uses that lack private investment, and consider U.S. competitiveness. The Director must consult with industry, colleges (including minority-serving schools), nonprofits, states, rural and urban communities, businesses of all sizes, experts from many sectors, and a demographically diverse set of stakeholders, and must coordinate with other federal efforts and the Executive Order 14067 interagency process. The Director must deliver the national strategy to the President and the relevant congressional committees not later than 1 year after December 23, 2022, and include priorities, plans to boost public-private investment and partnerships, risk-mitigation plans, and any recommended resources or actions. The Director should also work with OMB and other White House offices so research priorities inform budget requests. Subject to available funding, the National Science Foundation may award competitive grants to colleges, including minority-serving institutions, and nonprofits to study many topics such as security, privacy, resilience, interoperability, smart contracts, quantum threats, economics and governance of decentralized networks, human behavior, design for usability, and many use cases across government and industry (for example identity, digital property, public services, supply chains, medical records, financial inclusion, credentials, compliance, and infrastructure resilience). NSF should consider supporting startups through SBIR/STTR and align awards with the national strategy. The National Institute of Standards and Technology may run an applied project to show ledger benefits, pick an example use (like identity, supply chains, or broader participation), get public comment, avoid duplicating other work, plan risk controls, build a demo solution, choose private partners by competition, consider hosting at the National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence, and follow NIST cybersecurity best practices. NIST must brief the relevant congressional committees on progress not later than 1 year after December 23, 2022, and publish a report within 12 months after the project finishes.
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 19222
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73