Blockchain Timestamping and Creative Work Protection
United States legal framework
This guide presents the legal framework applicable in the United States to blockchain timestamping as proof of prior existence. The US context is unique and requires an honest assessment: copyright law is federal and includes a registration requirement that limits the role of timestamping in some scenarios — while leaving it highly relevant in others.
What is blockchain timestamping?
Blockchain timestamping creates permanent, tamper-proof evidence that a document existed at a specific point in time. It does not grant intellectual property rights — but it proves prior existence with mathematical certainty.
- Digital fingerprint: Your file is converted into a unique 64-character code (SHA-256 hash) — mathematically unique to that exact file.
- Permanent record: That fingerprint is inscribed on Ethereum, a public ledger maintained by thousands of computers worldwide. Once recorded, it cannot be altered or deleted.
- Timestamp: The blockchain automatically records the exact date and time — publicly verifiable by anyone, at any time, for free.
- Your certificate: You receive a ZIP containing the PDF certificate, metadata, and a link to the Ethereum transaction.
The US copyright registration requirement
US copyright protection attaches automatically at the moment of creation. However, the Copyright Act (17 U.S.C. s.411) requires that a work be registered with the US Copyright Office before an infringement lawsuit can be filed in federal court. This is a procedural prerequisite unique to the United States.
The registration requirement — key implications
When blockchain timestamping is particularly useful in the US
Given the registration requirement, blockchain timestamping plays a specific and well-defined role in the US creator's IP strategy.
| Situation | Why timestamping helps |
|---|---|
| During the registration gap | Registration takes 3–11 months. During this window, a blockchain timestamp provides the only dated, verifiable proof that your work existed — critical if infringement occurs before your registration is processed. |
| High-frequency creators | Developers committing daily, designers iterating constantly — registering every version individually is impractical. Timestamping creates a continuous, dated record at minimal cost. |
| Trade secrets and confidential information | Trade secrets cannot be registered. Blockchain timestamping proves the existence of a formula, algorithm, business plan or know-how at a specific date — supporting a misappropriation claim under the Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA) or state law. |
| Non-registrable subject matter | Ideas, concepts, briefs, proposals and methods are not copyrightable but can still be the subject of disputes. A timestamp proves you had them first. |
| Cross-border disputes | If a US work is infringed in a country where registration is not required (France, EU, Japan, Australia...), your Etch timestamp is directly admissible as evidence of prior existence in those foreign jurisdictions. |
| State-level proceedings | Vermont, Arizona, Nevada, Illinois and Delaware have explicitly recognised blockchain records as admissible without federal registration. |
Federal Rules of Evidence — Authentication (FRE 901)
In federal proceedings, blockchain evidence must meet standard admissibility tests: relevance, authenticity and reliability. The authentication bar is pragmatic: the proponent must produce evidence sufficient to support a finding that the item is what it purports to be.
Business records exception — FRE 803(6)
State-level blockchain legislation
Multiple US states have enacted explicit legislation recognising blockchain records.
| State | Key provision | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Vermont | Blockchain records admissible as business records; presumed authentic with written declaration. First state to codify blockchain evidence rules. | 2016 |
| Arizona | Blockchain records and signatures 'may not be denied legal effect, validity or enforceability.' | 2017 |
| Nevada | Blockchain records satisfy requirements for electronic records under UETA. | 2017 |
| Delaware | Corporations may maintain business records on distributed electronic networks. | 2017 |
| Illinois | Blockchain records deemed admissible as evidence in legal proceedings. | 2020 |
| Ohio | Similar provisions recognising blockchain records in electronic transactions law. | 2018 |
Use cases for US creators and businesses
The US creative economy is the world's largest. Blockchain timestamping is relevant across every sector.
| Scenario | What the timestamp proves | Stake |
|---|---|---|
| Literary and creative works | Final version before submission or publication | Copyright priority during registration gap |
| Software and algorithms | Exact codebase state at a given date | Prior art, trade secret protection |
| Music and sound recordings | Composition or recording before release | Copyright, authorship disputes |
| Visual art, design, fashion | Existence of the work before exhibition or distribution | Copyright, anti-counterfeiting |
| Patents — inventions | Reduction to practice before patent filing | Prior art evidence, post-AIA documentation |
| Trade secrets | Existence of confidential information at date X without disclosure | Defend misappropriation claims under DTSA |
| Collaborations and contracts | Drafts and proposals shared with parties | Breach of contract, IP ownership disputes |
Practical workflow — preparing your file
The file you timestamp must be preserved exactly as anchored. Even changing one character invalidates the proof.
- 1
Finalise your document
Make sure it is the version you want to protect — not a draft.
- 2
Export as PDF or ZIP
PDF for single documents. ZIP for multi-file projects (code repos, design packages).
- 3
Name it clearly
E.g.: Johnson_Algorithm_v1_FINAL_ANCHORED_2026-03-20.pdf
- 4
Make it read-only
Windows: right-click > Properties > Read-only. Mac: File > Get Info > Locked.
- 5
Timestamp it
Upload to etchproof.eu — your file never leaves your browser, only its hash is sent.
- 6
Store the ZIP
Keep the original and proof ZIP together, in at least two locations.
Cost comparison
Blockchain timestamping fills gaps that registration cannot cover — at a fraction of the cost.
| Method | Approximate cost | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Blockchain timestamping (Etch) | ~$2.20 USD (~2 EUR) | Permanent — covers registration gap |
| Copyright Office registration (online) | $45–65 USD | Life + 70 years (3–11 months processing) |
| Copyright Office expedited registration | $800 USD | Life + 70 years (5 business days) |
| Provisional patent application (USPTO) | $320–1,600 USD | 12 months placeholder |
| Utility patent application (USPTO) | $1,600–16,000+ USD | 20 years |
Important limitations
- It does NOT replace Copyright Office registration. Registration is required before filing a federal infringement lawsuit.
- It does NOT unlock statutory damages. Only timely registration gives access to up to $150,000 per infringement.
- It does NOT prove you are the author. It proves you had the file at that date — additional evidence may still be needed.
- It does NOT store your file. Only the fingerprint (hash) is recorded. Without the original file, the proof is useless.
- The certificate alone is not sufficient. Verification requires both the certificate AND the original file.
How verification works
Anyone can verify your proof, at any time, for free — including US courts, lawyers, and opposing parties.
- Calculate the SHA-256 hash of your original file using the verification tool at etchproof.eu.
- Look up the transaction on Etherscan.io — the public Ethereum blockchain explorer.
- Confirm that the hash in the blockchain matches your file's hash exactly.
Even if the Etch service were to cease operations, your proof remains permanently verifiable on the Ethereum blockchain — maintained by thousands of independent nodes worldwide.
Ces guides sont fournis à titre informatif uniquement et ne constituent pas un conseil juridique. Consultez un avocat qualifié pour tout conseil adapté à votre situation.