Japanese national icon 'Hanko' will be lost in digitalization
02 April 2019, 12:18 BDT


light bulb that burns on head. Things on the table Fujio Kawasaki is already working in the shop sitting in the house. 'Hanko' is closely associated with the lives of Japanese people who are closely associated with their lives.
In Japan, there are about 10 stores like Fujio Shop. At one time, buyers at Hanko stores used to shop in these stores. That day is no more. Japanese people no longer agree to the $ 720 denomination for the one time hyacinth name.
In Japan, personal seals are called 'hanco'. Hanko used to work in the signature. Artists make this seal (Hanko) by drawing special marks on the head of a small bar.
In Japan, personal seals are called 'hanco'. Hanko used to work in the signature. Artists make this seal (Hanko) by drawing special marks on the head of a small bar.
Every citizen of Japan has an affair with hanco from Japan's Emperor. The old style of using Hanko for wedding, flat rent, and various activities, including cars, is in Japan.
But the day has changed. This tradition is now threatened in Japan. Hanko is going to get lost in the digitalization wave. Hanko is taking over the digital signature.
The overuse of paper has slowed the Japanese administration's work. In this context, they are risking the digital system.
Already the country's three biggest banks are offering the opportunity to open accounts without Hanko. The idea of an online bank president, Noriyaki Maruma, would be to use fingers finger prints in digital mode instead of most Japanese Hanco soon. Meanwhile, Japanese local governments have started the process of electronic transactions.
According to Takuya Hirai, the science and technology minister of Bangladesh, the removal of Hanko is very logical. The people of Japan spend a lot of time behind paperwork. This paper-based bureaucracy can not be dragged. So the 'Digital First Bill' is being formulated through parliament.
The country's science and technology minister's firm resolve to introduce the digital system by law, frustrated, They wrote an emotional letter to the minister. In the letter, they requested the minister to abort his plan. They say that when the bill becomes a law, the livelihood of thousands of people involved in the Hanko industry will be threatened.
The letter claimed that Hanko was much better than the Western-style signature.
As the people of Hanko's artwork contribute, the reality is that Japanese are risking change.
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