DocuSign solves signatures
DocuSign captures e-signatures and stores the signed agreement with an audit trail in its cloud. The trust comes from DocuSign as a provider and from e-signature law. For getting a contract signed, that's exactly what you want.
A different goal: independent proof
Sometimes you don't need a signature — you need to prove a specific file existed at a point in time and hasn't been altered, on a record no single company controls. That's what blockchain timestamping does:
- Independent — the proof lives on a public blockchain, verifiable by anyone without trusting us.
- Permanent — it stays verifiable even if the service that created it disappears.
- Private — only the file's hash is published.
Signature vs. proof
| DocuSign | Blockchain timestamp | |
|---|---|---|
| Proves | Who signed, and when | A file existed, unchanged |
| Lives in | Provider's cloud | Public blockchain |
| Verified by | The provider's audit trail | Anyone, independently |
| Best for | Getting agreements signed | Proving existence & integrity |
Use them together or alone
You can timestamp a document before or after signing it elsewhere, or use a timestamp on its own when proof of existence is all you need. For the background on DocuSign's own blockchain experiments, see Does DocuSign use blockchain? — then create a timestamp in minutes.