Apple Magazine

SOME NEVADA GOVERNMENT­S USING BLOCKCHAIN FOR PUBLIC RECORDS

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Some northern Nevada counties are using blockchain, the online ledger best known for helping secure virtual currencies such as bitcoin, to store digital versions of government records like birth and marriage certificat­es.

The Reno Gazette-Journal reports that as of December in Washoe County, about 950 couples had received secure digital marriage certificat­es to home computers and smartphone­s since the program debuted in April 2018.

The newspaper found that Elko County is trying similar technology for certified digital birth certificat­es.

Phil Dhingra at San Francisco-based Titan Seal said the Washoe County digital marriage certificat­e program uses the Ethereum blockchain because it has computing power that makes it hard to hack.

He said he believes the number of digital certificat­es per year in the United States could at least match the billions of paper records that get a certificat­e or embossed seal of some kind.

Dhingra said people say they’re happy that instead of having to wait seven to 10 business days, a digital marriage certificat­e can be e-mailed to them in less than 24 hours.

“Marriage licenses and certificat­es are separate documents.

Washoe County Clerk Nancy Parent said wedding licenses must be obtained in person at the County Clerk’s office and are not available online.

Certificat­es are proof of marriage and are available via blockchain technology through the Washoe County Recorder’s Office.

Because a lot of people come from other states to get married in Reno, a lot of certificat­es are delivered to people in outside Nevada, said Hunter Halcomb, a Washoe County systems technician.

“But some people say, ‘Nah, I don’t use email so I don’t want it,’” Halcomb said.

She said that unlike a paper document that may be used once, a digital copy can be used as many times as the owner wants — as long as it is used in secure digital form. It can’t simply be printed and used like a regular paper certificat­e.

Halcomb said that while institutio­ns like the Social Security Administra­tion are good at accepting digital certificat­es, agencies like state motor vehicle department­s can vary with acceptance.

Despite the challenges, Washoe County is moving forward with more applicatio­ns for digitizing paper records. One project the county is looking at using blockchain technology for a potential digital record recovery system in case of a disaster.

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