Scottish Government’s DLT Future

Iona Murray
SICCAR
Published in
2 min readJul 4, 2018

The future of how citizens, business and government collaborate.

Our long-awaited Scottish Government research report was unveiled at FutureScot’s Digital Scotland 2018 conference last week. Sign up to our mailing list to receive it via email when it is widely available.

Our report is based on a study of international best practice, including interviews with technology experts and local public sector agencies, and learnings from worldwide public sector implementations.

Digital life relies on the exchange of information. When data is shared, it may be infinitely duplicated, modified and used in ways unintended by its originator. Identify theft, cybercrime, fake news, and misuse of intellectual property are commonplace because we have a limited toolset to govern contemporary models of data use.

Our report identifies a number of processes in Scottish public services which continue to rely on the use of paper, or web-based substitutes for paper. It also highlights the importance of effective and appropriate information sharing in enabling cross-agency collaboration to improve citizen services.

DLT makes it possible to register and record, share and transfer value or valuable information in a secure and tamper-proof way, to only the intended recipients. It represents a new opportunity for the creation of natively digital public services.

In this report, which was commissioned by the Scottish Government’s Digital Directorate, we recommend that Scotland should join the international ecosystem of DLT as an active participant.

This would involve developing a Scottish vision for DLT together with universities and businesses, initiating small-scale projects in the Scottish public sector, and sharing findings with the international network.

Our research team, including: Rab Campbell, Peter Ferry, Dr Hannah Rudman, and Gillian Thompson, conclude that:

DLT may represent the future of how citizens, consumers, and industries interact in a transparent, secure and streamlined manner to form the highest performing economies.

Our report will be made widely available over the next few weeks; sign up to receive it via email.

Scotland flag image from here (Has been cropped)

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