, Columnist
I Attended the First Official Digital Wedding
Estonia has approved civil contracts recorded in the blockchain.
Cash is fine, too.
Photographer: Sean GallupThis article is for subscribers only.
I just attended the strangest wedding: The whole world was invited, and it went almost without a hitch.
Starting Tuesday, the government of Estonia, in a partnership with an organization called Bitnation, is offering public notary services to Estonian e-residents. Its first official act was to register the marriage of two Spanish-born residents of London, Edurne Lolnaz and Mayel de Borniol. The marriage won't be recorded anywhere; instead, it'll be part of a blockchain -- a distributed database accessible to anyone with a private key, much like the process that registers bitcoin transactions.
