Ethereum-based project EthSign raises seed funding to put signed documents on the blockchain

Quick Take

  • EthSign is a decentralized application that records signed electronic documents on the Ethereum blockchain. 
  • The Singapore-based startup has raised $650,000 in a funding round led by venture capital firm Draper Associates.

Signing contracts is pretty unavoidable when it comes to employment, renting an apartment, and other day-to-day processes. But what if there was a way to sign documents on a platform like DocuSign, but in a fully decentralized way? 

Singapore-based startup EthSign is aiming to do just that. 

The startup announced today that it raised $650,000 in a seed round in June led by early-stage venture capital firm Draper Associates, with backing from blockchain investors including Hashkey Capital and ImToken Ventures. 

The EthSign team plans to use the new funding to grow its 10-person team by hiring more developers and legal consultants, as well as partner with other organizations in the marketplace. 

The e-signing decentralized application is built with Web3 technology and uses decentralized identifiers (DIDs), storage, and smart contracts to provide the same functionality as a Web2 application, but on the Ethereum blockchain. According to co-founder Potter Li, over 200 contracts have been signed on the platform by more than 500 users. The team has deployed EthSign on Layer 2 solutions Polygon and Arbitrum and plans to deploy to additional L2s in the future. 

EthSign is not the only platform that is working to put contracts on the blockchain. OpenSig is another project that could enable users to sign electronic documents without using a third party. It uses the Bitcoin blockchain instead of Ethereum. However, it’s currently only in the proof-of-concept phase. 

Self-executing contracts

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In addition to just virtually signing contracts on the blockchain, EthSign has also introduced the concept of self-executing “smart agreements.” The dapp rolled out the feature last month when it launched EthSign 3.0, a new version of the program with a revamped user interface. 

For instance, if a company based in the United States hires engineers from outside the country, it can establish a smart agreement with the employees. With the help of a smart contract, the company can set trigger conditions, or the work the employee has to complete in order to trigger the smart contract, and escrow funds, or the compensation the employee will receive for completing said work. Once the employee completes the work, a Chainlink oracle will detect it and trigger the condition for the smart contract so the funds can be paid out automatically. 

According to EthSign co-founder Potter Li, this will make it easier for employees to get paid on time, as soon as they complete their assigned work. 

“In the e-signing industry, what you sign is often very private and needs to be secured in good hands. Web2 companies cannot do this because they are constrained by their business model and are centralized,” Li told The Block. “On the blockchain, things are decentralized and secure because only the involved parties can see the documents. We, the platform, don’t have any control over the data.”

According to Li, EthSign maintains employer and employee privacy by storing all contracts in decentralized storage networks like Filecoin and IPFS. Only the parties involved in the contract have access to its actual contents. The Ethereum blockchain is used for knowing that a contract has been signed and for triggering payments via smart contracts.


© 2023 The Block. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

About Author

Saniya More (pronounced: Saan-ya Mo-ray) is a quadrilingual journalist at The Block. She got her master’s degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and did her undergraduate degree at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, Syracuse University. Her work has appeared in CBS News, Bangkok Post, Thai Enquirer, Globalists, Byline Times and other publications. When she’s not chasing a story, you will most likely find her biking, tweeting, taking photos or creating Spotify playlists for every occasion.