Bitnation is a non-governmental organization which uses blockchain smart contract—an algorithm-based digital contract through a decentralized database—to provide Jurisdiction as a Service (JaaS) to its participants, or Citizens. This means that Bitnation Citizens enter contracts such as birth certificates, marriages, wills, company registrations, and passport through Bitnation’s own virtual scope of jurisdiction. Bitnation’s implementation of decentralized self-governance through blockchain and its promise to “outcompete” the nation-state model has attracted over 10,000 Citizens. In this research, I ask why such a big wave of people collectively decides to relegate nation-state citizenship—an institution which has been established and legitimized for centuries—and incline towards a stateless identity system. What could be the roles of the modern citizen perception of their rights and their access to emerging technologies, for example blockchain smart contract, in this deviation? My hypothesis is that one’s choice to opt in for Bitnation’s virtual jurisdiction, despite the standing establishment of the nation-states, is a product of modern identity politics and technological development. The increasing political and social interconnectedness worldwide have intensified importance and manifestation of identities. In addition, new technologies, particularly blockchain and smart contract, ensure anonymity in communications and contracting practices among Citizens worldwide, and attract those whose identities placed them in socio-economic and political disadvantages in their societies. To test this hypothesis, I conduct literature review on topics of the nation-state model, stateless virtual citizenship, and emerging technologies. Further, I conduct ethnography, surveys, and interviews on Bitnation’s online platform to find the correlation between the Citizen identities and interests in Bitnation and how the platform satisfies them. Through his study I hope to shine a light on the changing expectations in the state-citizen relationship as a contract and the role of technology in the evolution of governance model from centralized to decentralized.