Latest news with #DigiLocker


India.com
7 hours ago
- General
- India.com
NIOS Class 10th Result 2025 To Be Declared Soon At results.nios.ac.in- Steps to Check Marks Via SMS, Website
NIOS Class 10th Result 2025: The National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) is expected to release the result for class 10th 2025 soon. All the candidates who have appeared for the class 10 exams can now check their results through the official website, i.e. Students will have to enter their enrolment number along with security captcha code to access their result. The NIOS Class 10th examination was conducted from 9th April, 2025 ro 19th May, 2025. And the NIOS Class 12th result was declared on 16th June, 2025. Additionally, candidates will also be able to access their results through the DigiLocker application. NIOS Class 10th Result 2025: Steps to Download Step 1: Go to the official website- Step 2: You will see the link of the result on the homepage, click on it. Step 3: A new page will be opened on your screen to login in. Step 4: Enter the required details of yours like your enrolment number and captcha code correctly, then submit it. Step 5: After submission, your NIOS Class 10th result will appear on your screen. Step 6: Check your scores and download the page. Step 7: Print out your scorecard for future reference. NIOS Class 10th Result 2025: How to Check Result Via SMS Sometimes due to heavy traffic websites stop working at the time of the result, in that case students can simply check their results via SMS without any internet connection, they have to open the SMS application and type the message in this format, 'NIOS10 along with their enrolment number and send it to- 5676750 and they will receive the result in SMS format. Students will have to achieve at least 33 per cent marks in all the subjects (at least five subjects, including one language) and overall aggregate to be considered pass. Students are advised to keep checking the official website for all the important updates.


Hindustan Times
7 hours ago
- Business
- Hindustan Times
AI needs to be open and inclusive like India Stack
Back in October 2024, I wrote on these pages of a group of 12-year-olds who had figured out an ingenious shortcut to finish their homework. Use 40% ChatGPT, 40% Google, and 20% of their own words. At first, it looked like cheating. But with the perspective of distance, I think it was something else entirely. Regulators in Europe are telling Meta (which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp) not to use user data to train AI unless people clearly agree to it. (Shutterstock/ Representative photo) These children had understood a basic truth: in today's world, what matters most is the result. Not the process. Not the effort. Ask the right question and let the machine find the answer. Don't worry too much about what happens in between. This way of thinking isn't limited to schoolwork anymore, it's showing up in the way digital systems are being built world over—India included. Over the last few years, India has quietly built one of the most impressive pieces of technology. Between Aadhaar, UPI, DigiLocker, CoWIN, Bhashini, and ONDC– collectively called IndiaStack– it is now used by millions of people. It helps people prove their identity, send money, download documents, get vaccinated, translate languages, and access other public services. But here's what makes India's system different from those in most other countries: it doesn't keep your data. In countries like the United States or across Europe, tech companies track what people do online. Every search, every click, every purchase is saved and studied. That information is then used to target ads, recommend content, and even train artificial intelligence systems. That is why The New York Times is now suing OpenAI (the builders of ChatGPT) — because its news articles were used to train a system without permission. This is why regulators in Europe are telling Meta (which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp) not to use user data to train AI unless people clearly agree to it. In India, the rules—and the values—are different. The digital systems here were built with public money and designed to serve everyone. But they were not designed to spy on people. They were created to work quickly, fairly, and without remembering too much. Take Aadhaar. All it is built to do is prove a person is who the person claims to be. It cannot track where you go. Or DigiLocker. It doesn't keep copies of your CBSE marksheets, PAN cards, or insurance papers. It simply fetches these documents from the source when you ask. That's all. It's a messenger, not a filing cabinet. UPI moves money between people. But it doesn't remember what you spent it on. Long story short, these systems were built to function like light switches. They work when needed, and switch off when the job is done. The builders insisted it doesn't hold on to your personal information for longer than necessary. That's why India's digital model is being noticed around the world. It's open, fair, and inclusive. But now, with the rise of artificial intelligence, a new kind of problem is emerging. AI tools need a lot of data to learn how to speak, listen, write, or make decisions. In India, companies are beginning to train AI using public systems. Language tools learn from Bhashini. Health startups are using patterns from CoWIN to build diagnostic tools. Fintech firms are using transaction frameworks to refine how they give loans. This isn't illegal. It was even expected. These public systems were built to encourage innovation. But here's the problem: the public helped create these systems, and now private companies are using them to build powerful new tools—and may be making money from them. Yet the public might not see any of that value coming back. This is where the story of the 12-year-olds we started with, becomes relevant again. Just like those students who used machines to do most of the work, there's now a larger system that is also skipping the middle part. People provide the inputs—documents, payments, identities. The machines learn from them. And then private players build services or products that benefit from all that learning. The people who made it possible? They are left out of the conversation. In other countries, the debate is about privacy. In India, the debate must now shift to fairness. It's not about stopping AI. It's not about banning companies from using public tools. It's about asking for transparency and accountability. If a company is using data or tools from public systems to train its AI, it should say so clearly. If it benefits from public data, it should give something back—like sharing improved datasets, or allowing its models to be audited. If it's building a commercial product on public infrastructure, it should explain how it used that infrastructure in the first place. This is not regulation for the sake of it. It's basic respect for the public that made the system possible in the first place. India's digital platforms were built to serve everyone. They were not designed to store people's information, and that's what makes them special. But that openness can be misused if those who build on top of it forget where their foundations came from. It's easy to be dazzled by AI. But intelligence—human or machine—shouldn't come without responsibility. So here's the question worth asking: If the public built the digital tools, used them, trusted them, and helped them grow—why aren't they part of the rewards that artificial intelligence is now creating?


Time of India
14 hours ago
- General
- Time of India
TS SSC Supplementary Result 2025 expected soon at bse.telangana.gov.in: How to check, passing criteria and more
The Telangana Board of Secondary Education (BSE Telangana) is likely to declare the Class 10 (SSC) supplementary exam results 2025 by the fourth week of June. The supplementary exams were held from June 3 to June 13, 2025. Once the results are released, students can check their marks memo and result status on the official website — . Results will also be made available via SMS and DigiLocker, providing convenient access for students. After checking the results, students are advised to immediately download and verify their mark memos, ensuring that personal details and subject-wise marks are correctly mentioned. Any errors should be reported to the board right away to avoid complications during the admission process. Students who successfully clear the exams can proceed with Class 11 admissions in either state-run or private institutions, depending on their selected academic stream. The SSC certificate will be a critical document for these admissions. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Here's The Average Price of a 6-Hour Gutter Guards Upgrade Read More Undo It is also recommended that students stay updated with district-wise counselling updates or school admission notices, which generally follow soon after the result declaration. In some cases, students who narrowly miss the passing mark may be eligible for re-evaluation or alternate admission options, subject to board guidelines. How to Check TS SSC Supplementary Result 2025 Step 1: Visit the official website: Live Events Step 2: Click on the 'TS SSC Supplementary Result 2025' link Step 3: Enter your hall ticket number Step 4: Submit the details to view your result Step 5: Download and print the result for future reference TS SSC Supplementary 2025: Passing Marks According to the board rules: Students must score at least 35 out of 100 in each subject to pass For the Second Language paper, a minimum of 20 marks is required Result Trends from Previous Years In 2024, the Telangana SSC supplementary results were declared on June 28, roughly two weeks after the exams ended, aligning with this year's expected timeline. In contrast, the 2023 results were announced on July 7, around three and a half weeks after the conclusion of the exams, indicating a slightly longer wait.


Indian Express
2 days ago
- General
- Indian Express
TS SSC Supplementary Result 2025: When were scores announced in previous sessions?
TS SSC Supplementary Result 2025: The Telangana Board of Secondary Education (BSE Telangana) is expected to declare the SSC or Class 10 supplementary results for 2025 by the fourth week of June. This year, the supplementary exams were conducted from June 3 to June 13. Once announced, students will be able to check their marks memo and passing status on the official website— The marks will also be accessible via SMS and DigiLocker platforms for ease of use. Looking at the trends from previous years, the result timelines have varied but provide a general sense of what students can expect. Last year, the Telangana SSC supplementary results were announced on June 28, approximately two weeks after the exams concluded. In 2023, the declaration came slightly later, on July 7, indicating a gap of about three and a half weeks from the end of the examinations. The 2022 cycle saw a significant delay, with results being released on September 2—almost three months after the exams, possibly due to post-pandemic scheduling disruptions. In 2021, the results were published on July 21, about six weeks after the tests were held. Based on this data, the timeline has stabilised in the last two years to around three to four weeks post-exams, making the fourth week of June 2025 a likely window for this year's result. Once results are out, students should immediately download their marks memo and carefully verify all the details, including name spellings and subject-wise scores. Any discrepancies should be reported to the board without delay to avoid issues during further admissions. For those who pass, the next step would be securing admission into Class 11 through state or private institutions, depending on their chosen academic stream. The SSC certificate will play a crucial role in these admissions. Students are advised to keep track of district-level counselling or school-level admission notices, which usually begin shortly after results are published. In some cases, students who fall just short of passing may have the option to apply for re-evaluation or special admission policies, depending on the board's final guidelines. Meanwhile, the Telangana State Board of Intermediate Education (TSBIE) announced the TS Inter Supplementary Results 2025 on June 16. Students can download their marks memo from or The exams were held from May 22 to 29.


Time of India
4 days ago
- Business
- Time of India
From days to minutes: How e-contracts are driving compliance and business ease across states
Academy Empower your mind, elevate your skills Take the example of Aarti Mehta, a freelance consultant who works with clients across India, often starting projects on tight timelines. In the past, sending printed contracts, waiting for client signatures, and coordinating returns caused delays and disrupted project starts. With Digidoc, she can upload her contract template, send it digitally, complete online stamp duty payment, and get signatures—all within minutes. Or consider Rahul Bhasin, a legal manager at a mid-sized enterprise. Rahul's team manages hundreds of contracts annually. Searching for a particular clause in a five-year-old vendor agreement or proving that a document was correctly executed was once a recurring pain point. Digidoc's secure digital storage and audit trail, contract retrieval, and compliance checks can solve this by enabling Rahul to pull up any document instantly, check its execution status, and present a clear digital audit trail, critical during audits and legal reviews. For startups like Shweta Deshmukh's fintech firm, onboarding partners across multiple locations used to be a logistical headache. With Digidoc's editable templates, KYC integration, and e-signing feature, Shweta can complete her onboarding agreements swiftly, enabling the company to focus on growth rather than paperwork. Easy onboarding: Self-register using your email or social login, and complete KYC in minutes through DigiLocker. Self-register using your email or social login, and complete KYC in minutes through DigiLocker. Cost-effective: Pay only for what you use with flexible subscription plans designed to address your needs. Pay only for what you use with flexible subscription plans designed to address your needs. Custom templates: Use ready-made legal formats or upload your own. Use ready-made legal formats or upload your own. Consent management: Users can secure online approval from multiple parties for freezing the editable agreement format. Users can secure online approval from multiple parties for freezing the editable agreement format. Online stamp duty payment: Stamp duty payment and other related charges can be paid securely online through a fully automated process, eliminating any manual intervention. Stamp duty payment and other related charges can be paid securely online through a fully automated process, eliminating any manual intervention. End-to-end digital execution: From stamp duty to signing and storage, every step happens online, with full audit trails. Signing can be completed using Aadhaar or DSC. From stamp duty to signing and storage, every step happens online, with full audit trails. Signing can be completed using Aadhaar or DSC. Customer support and issue resolution: In case a user faces any issue in completing the transaction, the user can raise a ticket via the dedicated Help desk and seek resolution of their issue. Status tracking: Users can track the delivery status of eStamps, where physical dispatch is needed. Are you a startup founder, freelancer, or legal professional juggling contracts across cities—often with tight deadlines and tighter resources? Are document delays draining your productivity? Are missed signoffs, courier hold-ups, and cluttered paperwork slowing you down—and costing you money?You're not recently, executing a contract meant printing reams of paper, coordinating couriers, and chasing signatures across cities—a process that often took days, if not weeks. Compliance lapses were utterly frustrating—and it slows down things are changing fast. Thanks to the Government of India's Digital India mission, businesses are embracing digital tools for everyday operations, including contract is where digital document execution platforms such as StockHolding Digidoc are stepping in to digitise the entire process. Essentially, digital document execution platforms are end-to-end systems that enable the creation, execution, and storage of legal documents. By enabling real-time execution of contracts from anywhere—home, office, or across locations in India—these platforms also promote 'Ease of Doing Business'.Several factors have fuelled this Information Technology Act, 2000 recognises digital signatures, putting digital document execution on par with traditional methods; Aadhaar eSign is widely adopted; and DigiLocker and UPI have made KYC and payments result: contracts can now be executed in minutes, not days. StockHolding Digidoc is part of this shift. The secure, cloud-based platform helps users create, execute, and store legally valid documents entirely online—without printing, couriering, or StockHolding Digidoc , users can create and customise non-registerable legal documents online, share them with all parties to obtain digital consent, and collect legally valid signatures using Aadhaar or Digital Signature Certificates (DSC)—without any physical paperwork or meetings. Globally, the e-signature market is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of over 26% between 2022 and 2027 —a trend that's reflected in India's rapid adoption of Aadhaar eSign, eStamping, and digital contract secure, web-based Digidoc platform is designed for professionals, startups, law firms, brokers, and businesses that want to move fast and stay compliant—with minimal manual allows users to pay stamp duty online through an integrated system and automatically stores their documents with full audit trails, available for instant from wherever you are—whether it's an office in Puducherry or a home setup in to a nationwide survey conducted by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI) , approximately 35% of small to medium enterprises (SMEs) reported a reduction in their annual operational costs by 11–20% as a result of adopting digital is straightforward. Users can sign up with an email or a social account and complete KYC verification via DigiLocker using PAN and StockHolding Digidoc platform is built for non-registerable documents only. According to the Indian Registration Act, 1908, a non-registerable document does not require mandatory registration at the office of a Sub-Registrar. Examples of non-registerable documents include a power of attorney (except for selling property), vendor and client agreements, service contracts, NDAs, employment and consultancy letters, partnership deeds, and shareholder stamp duty laws varying across states, Digidoc is currently operational in select States and Union Territories, adhering to the laws of the land. Digidoc operates in locations where digital execution and e-stamping are legally enabled. This ensures that the platform complies with regional stamp duty laws and regulations.. Expansion to other States is in progress and will depend on local stamp duty by digitising traditionally manual workflows, Digidoc complements the Digital India initiative, promoting a secure, accessible, and paperless flow of understand how this plays out, let's meet three fictional users who represent common challenges in today's working all three cases, physical stamp paper wasn't businesses once relied on physical files, stamps, and signatures to finalise contracts, the transition to digital documentation has become increasingly Digidoc, a full audit trail is generated and stored securely—eliminating search inefficiencies, misplacements, and security risks of paper-based of shuffling papers between departments or waiting for in-person signoffs, individual professionals, startups, law firms, brokers, and mid-sized companies that value speed and accuracy can complete an entire contract process in a few a look at the core competencies of the Digidoc platform:with individual users able to seamlessly transfer executed documents to their Digilocker account, for secure, long-term businesses prioritise speed, compliance, and cross-border collaboration, platforms such as Stockholding Digidoc are likely to play a pivotal role in shaping the next phase of digital contract management in here to know more.