New Delhi — A government report released on Tuesday marked the seventh anniversary of the Digital India programme by stating that more than 110 crore (1.1 billion) academic records have been digitised and integrated across four platforms: the Academic Bank of Credit (ABC), the National Academic Depository (NAD), the Academic Performance and Assessment Repository (APAAR) and DigiLocker.
The report, compiled by the Ministry of Education, said the combined database now allows students, institutions and employers to securely store, exchange and verify credentials online. According to the document, the ABC and NAD together host roughly 70 crore records, while APAAR and DigiLocker account for the remaining 40 crore. The ministry highlighted that the ecosystem “enables real‑time verification” and reduces the need for physical certificates.
The integration, announced in 2020, links the ABC’s credit‑based system with NAD’s repository of certificates, while APAAR provides assessment data and DigiLocker serves as a personal cloud storage service. Officials claim the unified platform cuts processing time for transcript verification from weeks to minutes and curbs fraud involving forged academic documents.
Education analysts note that the scale of digitisation is unprecedented for a developing country. “Moving over a billion records onto a secure, interoperable platform is a major step toward reducing bureaucratic delays and improving transparency in the education sector,” said Dr. Ritu Sharma, a senior fellow at the Centre for Policy Research, in an interview. However, she cautioned that data privacy safeguards must keep pace with the expanding database.
Analysis: The government’s emphasis on a consolidated digital academic ecosystem aligns with broader Digital India goals of reducing paperwork and enhancing service delivery. By centralising records, the ministries can potentially streamline scholarship disbursement, job recruitment and cross‑institutional credential checks. Yet the sheer volume of data raises questions about cybersecurity and the adequacy of consent mechanisms for students whose records are stored long‑term. Independent audits of the platforms’ security protocols have not been publicly disclosed, and civil‑society groups have previously urged stricter oversight of digital repositories. As the ecosystem matures, its impact on reducing credential fraud and improving access to education services will likely become clearer, provided that robust privacy and accountability measures are instituted.
Sources
– NDTV, “11 years of Digital India: Over 110 crore academic records as per government report,” https://www.ndtv.com/education/11-years-of-digital-india-over-110-crore-academic-records-as-per-government-report-11729600#publisher=newsstand.
Story synopsis gathered from: NDTV – India News — source
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