The roots of the idea for the Perpetuity Foundation can be traced back to the early days of the controversy around initial coin offerings in 2014.
Technology companies and regulators had different opinions on what an initial coin offering was. This controversy, and its destabilizing effect on the ecosystem, still lingers. The same pattern emerged as the definition of digital assets began to expand, with developers, lawmakers, and individual regulatory bodies each creating a different definition of digital assets.
The call to action to form the Perpetuity Foundation came in 2021 while I was researching my MSc thesis. I was investigating how digital assets transfer after the death of the holder. What I found was another example of two very different recommendations offered by the legal and tech community. And these differences have consequences for the holder and the distributed ledger ecosystem.
I formed the Perpetuity Foundation in 2022 to create a community of stakeholders who share a common interest in the successful adoption and integration of distributed ledger technology. The foundation offers a conduit between experts from different disciplines and a forum for the exchange of ideas.
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