The district administration for a town in India has digitized all land records dating back to the 1950s and stored them on the Avalanche blockchain in a move toward transparent, tamper-proof land governance.
On March 6, the Dantewada District Administration of Chhattisgarh, India, announced that it had digitized over 700,000 land records via the Office of Land Records. The digitized records were secured on the Avalanche blockchain in collaboration with Indian blockchain startup LegitDoc by Zupple Labs.
In addition to eradicating manual searching of land records, the tribal communities and farmers in the region are able to secure ownership records and reduce disputes. Indian town adopts Avalanche blockchain for tamper-proof land recordsEven though Indian government is not friendly towards the adoption of cryptocurrency, they are really aggressive when it comes to blockchain use cases, we had see many in the recent days and we can add one more to that list.
Using blockchain technology in a government office, looks like we are in the 2050.
