Digital Marksheets To Be Issued By CBSE Board Soon, Signals IT Ministry

The IT ministry is looking forward to issue digital mark sheets and certificates to the students of Central Board of Education (CBSE) which can be stored in digital lockers.

This facility will enable people to store their important files and documents online, any person with an Aadhar number can open his or her account for free. Most importantly, it does not make people run for certificate attestation.

Source: Blog post

Digital lockers have already been launched on February 10 by the government and over 1 lakh people have started using it in three months. Madhya Pradesh (over 24,000), Uttar Pradesh (over 17,000) and Gujarat (over 13,000) are top three states where people have registered for this facility.

Source: homeobook.com

He added, the Department of Electronics and IT is also working with various other entities to issue digital certificates. “Along with academic certificates we are approaching other government departments that are involved in issuing any kind of certificates. PAN Card, Voter ID are also in pipeline,” he said.

According to reports, IT ministry is also looking forward to start working with Oil PSUs to issue digital LPG books and with state governments for ration cards and state education board certificates.

These steps would certainly help people in saving their time and money by not running from pillar to post to get documents and the required attestation.

You might also like
Delhi Air Pollution: Stage IV Curbs to Now Apply at Stage III Under New GRAP Rejig — Full List of Restrictions
Seven Maoists Killed in Andhra Pradesh Encounter a Day After Madvi Hidma’s Elimination
Delhi Air Quality Deteriorates to ‘Severe’; Construction Halted, Schools Shift to Hybrid Mode up to Class 5
Dare. Drop. Win. The Creator Rebellion Rides With Pulsar Underground
Snabbit Bags $30Mn in Third Fundraise This Year, Clocks Over 3 Lakh Jobs in October
₹1.2 Crore Delhi Cloud Seeding Trial Fails to Produce Artificial Rain; AAP Takes ‘Lord Indra’ Dig