California’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) digitized 42 million of car titles on the Avalanche (AVAX) network as part of development to modernize the state’s title transfer process with software development firm Oxhead Alpha.
Users will soon be able to claim their digital titles via the DMV’s application, track and manage them without getting to the office, according to an Avalanche blog post. The time to transfer vehicle titles drops to a few minutes using blockchain rails in the backend from two weeks via the traditional process, a DMV spokesperson said in an email.
Efforts to deploy blockchain tech have mostly focused on financial services with big banks and asset managers putting traditional assets such as bonds, credit and funds on distributed ledgers pursuing speedier transactions, greater transparency and increased efficiency. This is also known as tokenization of real-world assets (RWA).
DMV’s implementation serves as an example that blockchain rails could also bring similar benefits for bureaucratic processes and managing large databases in the public service sector.
“Blockchains are the most advanced tool any organization can leverage to maximize efficiency, maintain compliance and protect consumer data – vital components for a government serving its constituents,” said John Wu, president of Ava Labs, an Avalanche ecosystem development organization.
- FDIC Opens Doors for Banks to Engage in Crypto Activities
- US Lawmakers’ Proposed Ban on Algorithmic Stablecoins Draws Industry Backlash
- Pro-Crypto Congressman French Hill to Lead Powerful House Financial Services Committee Panel Next Term
- Over 20% of Voters in Swing States Consider Crypto a Key Issue in US Elections, DCG Survey
- Congressman Demand Clarity on Crypto Airdrops From SEC Chair Gary Gensler
- Franklin Templeton, Van Eck and Blackrock Compete to Promote Bitcoin ETFs on Google Ads































































































































