**7.6 The potential of using ANT in Bitland**

ANT sees that broad, multi-stakeholder engagement is key; therefore, networks, meet-ups, building expertise etc. are essential to guarantee the implementation and promulgation of the technology [43]. Bitland records can be disputed if the official institutes do not accept the legality of these records that is why Bitland was not supported and preserved through law. Regardless of how property is registered, a dispute over land titles must always be facilitated by some form of the court system. Moreover, the engagement of governmental actors is essential to get the accuracy and legitimacy of the asset because land registration utilises the concrete assets that should be confirmed by professionals. The government is considered as an organisational body that has the supervising and setting rules and regulation role for all actors like transactions costs reduction and increase information symmetry.

The government cannot be ignored as it is one of the necessary actors to register land in an official manner approved by the official, executive and judicial authorities. For example, Bitland records would be at risk in case of a dispute or gain financial loans. The legality of the land registers is probable to be enquired, particularly in statutory courts, where some titles were not recorded via the official government channel and were not dealt by Lands Commission surveyors. Legitimacy in the registration process regarding the conformity of formal rules for land registration is debatable since it has not involved formal surveyors from the government. The translation stage proposed by the theory can provide some arrangements between the official authorities and Petland, which affects the gradual entry of the new system into the official records. If the community does not trust the system, it would continue using unwritten agreements with the chiefs. In that case, the registry has little durability in securing that their right of use is tracked, and records are secured from tampering [52].
