Ford Motor Company has joined a new blockchain-based legal data project led by Iagon and Cloud Court, exploring how decentralized storage could change how large enterprises handle sensitive legal records.
The pilot, currently in the Proof-of-Concept stage, is being built on the Cardano blockchain. It aims to solve a persistent problem faced by corporate legal teams, storing and managing thousands of hours of testimony, depositions, and transcripts in a secure and compliant way.
Ford isn’t funding the project but is acting as an advisor, providing input on how a decentralized model could work at scale for enterprise-level legal departments. The automaker brings deep experience to the table, with a legal infrastructure that deals with litigation and compliance across dozens of jurisdictions.
The current system used by many companies is fragmented, records are often spread across different teams, formats, and storage systems. That opens up risks around data security, delays in legal prep, and compliance with strict frameworks like HIPAA, GDPR, and court-mandated protective orders.
This PoC attempts to streamline that. Iagon is offering a decentralized cloud storage layer where sensitive data is encrypted and stored off-chain. Access permissions, audit trails, and activity logs are managed on-chain using Cardano. On top of that, Cloud Court is adding its AI tools to analyze and organize testimony data.
For Cardano, it’s a rare real-world use case that goes beyond the usual finance or DeFi angle. If this model works, it could open the door to more serious enterprise adoption, especially in industries like healthcare, law, and government, where data sensitivity and regulation are non-negotiable.
Ford’s involvement isn’t out of the blue. The company has been experimenting with blockchain since 2018. Ford’s no stranger to blockchain. Back in 2018, it helped launch the MOBI alliance alongside GM, BMW, and Renault, aiming to bring decentralized tech into the mobility space.
A year later, it teamed up with IBM to track ethically sourced cobalt using blockchain, and by 2022, it was already filing metaverse-related trademarks.
Whether this becomes a model others follow or just a one-off experiment will depend on how it performs outside the lab. For now, it’s one of the rare pilots that brings AI, legal tech, and a Fortune 50 company under the same roof.
Also Read: Ripple-Backed 3iQ Launches North America’s 1st XRP ETF on TSX