From 278153a7e9d1d88f2b69a8ddceabeecd57557d22 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: infominer33 Date: Tue, 11 Dec 2018 09:47:28 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] housekeeping --- issues.toml | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/issues.toml b/issues.toml index e19db769..195f9b2f 100644 --- a/issues.toml +++ b/issues.toml @@ -130,7 +130,7 @@ Tags = ["herdius"] ["IXO Foundation"] Link = ["http://ixo.foundation/","https://ixo.foundation/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/ixo-Technical-White-Paper-w-Cover-Version-3.0-8-December-2017-1.pdf"] -Description = "Until now, it has not been technically or economically feasible to produce, measure and value impact-related data at scale, in ways that are cost-effective and useful.\n\nLegacy data gets locked in silos of proprietary indexed databases, with little to no compatibility, interoperability, or ways of avoiding aggregation errors, such as double-counting. The fidelity of data has been a pervasive problem. It was hard to prove that datasets had not been tampered with, corrupted, or originated from untrustworthy sources. However, with Verifiable Claims, it is now feasible to collect, transport and store data resources in high-fidelity formats. Data can be cryptographically hashed and digitally signed at the point of collection or issuance. This cryptographically verifiable data can be proven not to have been tampered with and the signatures of the claim issuer can be authenticated. This adds trust assurance and data provenance.\n\nWe now also have the technological means to resolve impact-related data to globally unique digital identifiers, rooted in the distributed public key infrastructures of blockchains. The Decentralized Identifier (DID) specification developed by the Rebooting the Web of Trust community (in which we participate) is becoming a W3C web standard. This enables the creation of high-resolution datasets, tagged with globally unique identifiers that can be cryptographically authenticated." +Description = "We are developing the mechanisms to share data-sets through software-mediated governance mechanisms, using the Ocean Protocol. Data resources will become locatable across any data store, using content-addressing, based on the Interplanetary Linked Data (IPLD) specification. The quality of these datasets will improve through the economic incentives and coordination capabilities of curation markets, as described by Simon De la Rouviere." Tags = ["ixo","data"] ["Human Trust Protocol —HubToken"]