From 55f47cab0d496a2b7fcaef46132f3a6eaf534e7f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: infominer33 <44134283+infominer33@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Mon, 17 Dec 2018 16:35:33 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] typo --- self-sovereign/7-myths-of-self-sovereign-identity.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/self-sovereign/7-myths-of-self-sovereign-identity.md b/self-sovereign/7-myths-of-self-sovereign-identity.md index f318d7a7..6a4efd47 100644 --- a/self-sovereign/7-myths-of-self-sovereign-identity.md +++ b/self-sovereign/7-myths-of-self-sovereign-identity.md @@ -35,6 +35,6 @@ SSI isn't dependent upon any particular means of authentication. It offers a pro #### Myth 7: User-centric identity is the same as SSI. -User-centric identity gaves the user greater control than before, and that’s great! However, it never realized its original intent — user independence — and it actually left large intermediaries with even more power than before. Facebook and Google, the biggest beneficiaries of the move to user-centric identity, would call their services user-centric. +User-centric identity gives the user greater control than before, and that’s great! However, it never realized its original intent — user independence — and it actually left large intermediaries with even more power than before. Facebook and Google, the biggest beneficiaries of the move to user-centric identity, would call their services user-centric. Even the term gives it away: you’re still a user and not the owner, and that means the underlying service is siloed or federated, not self-sovereign. Of course with SSI there are services provided by third parties, such as cloud agent hosting and relationship management apps and tools, but they are modular and replaceable.