Record Authentication
The Goverion Arbitration and Mediation Court uses blockchain infrastructure to authenticate key procedural records within arbitration and mediation proceedings. Important milestones—such as filings, procedural orders, and final awards—are recorded through cryptographic verification to ensure their authenticity.
This approach creates a reliable and tamper-resistant record of procedural events while preserving the confidentiality of the underlying documents.
Security & Infrastructure
The Court's digital infrastructure is designed to support the secure administration of dispute resolution proceedings. Blockchain-based authentication mechanisms help ensure that procedural records cannot be altered or manipulated once recorded.
Combined with secure case management systems, this framework provides an additional layer of trust, transparency, and resilience in the administration of disputes.
Data Protection
Confidentiality and data protection remain central to all proceedings administered by the Court. Sensitive case materials, submissions, and communications are securely managed and remain accessible only to authorized parties involved in the proceedings.
Blockchain technology is used solely to verify procedural authenticity through cryptographic records, while the underlying case data remains protected within secure systems designed to safeguard privacy and confidentiality.
Technical Overview
The on-chain framework supports the authentication of procedural milestones without interfering with the decision-making process of arbitrators or mediators. Cryptographic hashes of key documents may be recorded to establish a verifiable proof of authenticity and time of issuance.
This architecture allows the Court to combine established arbitration procedures with modern digital infrastructure, strengthening procedural reliability while maintaining the confidentiality expected in international dispute resolution.