On April 10, North Carolina legislator Neil Jackson introduced the "North Carolina Digital Asset Freedom Act," which proposes to recognize eligible "digital assets" as a legitimate form of payment and taxation. Although the bill does not explicitly mention Bitcoin, the defined conditions for "digital assets" make Bitcoin eligible. These conditions include a market capitalization of at least $750 billion, a daily trading volume exceeding $10 billion, a market history of over 10 years, censorship resistance, proof-of-work consensus, no central authority, a network uptime of over 99.98%, and a maximum supply cap. This bill is the latest initiative by various states in the U.S. to promote Bitcoin as a strategic reserve amid inflation concerns. Previously, former Governor Roy Cooper vetoed a bill that prohibited central bank digital currencies, but this veto was overturned by the state legislature in 2024. Dan Spuller from the Blockchain Association praised the actions of the North Carolina legislator.