University of Nicosia Issues Block-Chain Verified Certificates

Certificates for a pioneering course on cryptocurrencies by the University of Nicosia in Cyprus were recorded on the block chain yesterday, allowing anyone to verify their authenticity. The free online course, titled DFIN-511: Introduction to Digital Currencies, was taught by Antonis Polemitis and Andreas M Antonopoulos. The duo published a comprehensive explanation of how they designed the certificates to be block chain verifiable. This means that course graduates no longer have to rely on the university to verify that they completed the course successfully. “Even if the University of Nicosia and its website were to disappear, so long as the validated hash still exists as a public record, people can [...] authenticate any certificate,” the course website said. 5/ Note this transaction and the OP_Return code that contains a hash of the index document for all the certificates: https://t.co/sC8cFCw2Ce — Digital Currency (@MScDigital) September 15, 2014 How it works Verifying the university’s certificates relies on the OP_RETURN field that is contained in each transaction. The field was designed to allow a small amount of extra data to be stored in the block chain, as a first step towards allowing assets like property or documents like contracts to be exchanged using the protocol. The course instructors created hashes of the PDF versions of each certificate, collated all the certificates into an index document, and then generated a hash of that. This hash was then entered into the OP_RETURN field of an unspendable transaction. Hashes are unique strings of characters that can be generated by any input, using an algorithm. In this case, the SHA-256 algorithm, which is also used in the bitcoin protocol, was used. Hashes are only one-way, so someone with a particular certificate can replicate a hash using the algorithm, but that hash can’t regenerate the certificate. Hashes of hashes The instructors have published the hash of the certificate index on the university’s website. Anyone who wishes to verify a certificate must first check that he has the correct index document. This is done by checking the OP_RETURN field of the particular transaction sent by the instructors. Once the index has been verified, then individual certificates can be verified. This is done by creating a SHA-256 hash of a given certificate, and then comparing it against the hashes listed in the authenticated index document. The hash of the index document is published on the University of Nicosia website, along with the specific transaction containing this data. The hash contained in the transaction’s OP_RETURN field can be seen at sites like Coin Secrets. For the validation process to work, the index document has to be readily available. The course instructors note that students are encouraged to host the index document themselves to reduce reliance on the document located on the university’s website. The course instructors also announced that the course completion rate was over 20% from a cohort of 615 students. The next session of the course is scheduled to start on 15th October. The University of Nicosia is a visible proponent of cryptocurrencies, accepting bitcoin for tuition fees and offering a masters degree in digital currencies. Andreas AntonopoulosBlock ChainUniversity of Nicosia
Original author: Joon Ian Wong