decentralized-id.github.io/_posts/identosphere-dump/assorted.md
2022-12-02 04:30:37 -05:00

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Highlights

Identosphere

We created an Identosphere Group on Tru.net

Projects

RIF Identity

History

A short timeline highlights just how quickly SSI has developed. It underlines the path and development of the evolution of Internet Identity.

As MyData Global saw in our reflection on 2021, the transformation towards a human-centric personal data economy is underway. This transformation is driven by two forces: first, the dominant unethical approaches to personal data are starting to show how unsustainable they really are.

Great Work on Badges!

In May, we did some workshopping with the crypto platform NEAR, which was the first time we accepted cryptocurrency as part of our fee. In May, We Are Open Cooperative also turned 5 years old. We celebrated this momentous occasion by launching our new website and adding more stuff to our free learning resource hub.

2021 has been a productive year for MyData Global, and a significant one for the wider personal data world. The Facebook Files helped raise the issue of personal data and ethics to the general public, and the EUs Data Governance Act has helped put into practice many of the changes MyData Global has been advocating for.

For us, interoperability will remain a very present topic for the next year (https://jolocom.io/blog/can-we-avoid-a-ssi-babel/.

The history of identity online. Finger, CompuServe, DNS/WWW, Facebook

The slides are based on this blog post: https://schmud.de/posts/2021-04-22-id-through-time.html


Nothing to prevent players to take advantage of SSI. They may add something small and useful aspects to the protocols.

The hope is that our stuff is super interoperable. So you can actually really leave.

Facebook is interesting because it was based on the .edu domain. Small network. Solving for the endstate that we see now is different than starting back then.

Zero-knowledge proofs and trustless networks may require high-trust environments for adoptions.

  • Distributed Open Identity: Self-Sovereign OpenID: A Status Report

    follow up of the Identiverse 2019 session “SSO: Self-sovereign OpenID Connect a ToDo list”. (Decentralized Identity, Mobile, Verified Claims & Credentials, Standards, Preeti Rastogi, Nat Sakimura)

  • State of Identity with IDRamp (Enterprise SSI company)

    As someone who has uniquely spent their full career immersed in identity, Mike Vesey (CEO of IdRamp) shares an insider perspective of how the industry has evolved during his tenure. This episode dives into the impacts of rapid digitalization worldwide, where identity is heading due to digital transformation, and the benefits that come with it.

SSI vs Santa

  • Phil Wolff shares:

    In 2021 Santa decentralizes his list, no longer relying on childrens Real Names in compliance with kid privacy laws. Self-sovereign identity lets kids ask Santa, confident their identities are authenticated (right toys to the right kid) & that he uses verified naughty/nice data.

Narrative

Digital Caribou shares their thoughts on Digital Transformation and inclusion - very good thinking for all of us working on digital identity.

We believe that the emphasis on transformation as both process and effects is particularly important, especially as although digitization and digitalization are well underway, accelerated by the response to COVID-19 (remote working, payments, etc.), these are not inevitable processes. They are the results of human decisions. Similarly, the effects of these are not inevitable, either.

Interviews

  • Building Digital Trust Ecosystems with Riley Hughes from Trinsic [Podcast]

    The reason I love that quote is that digital credentials and verifiable data can not only impact the use cases that everybody tends to think about when they think about SSI, but they could permeate our whole lives and streamline everything we do.

  • Michael Becker Interviewed Kaliya re:SSI

    Kaliyas purpose is to answer this profound question: “How do we own, control, manage, and represent ourselves in the digital world, independently of the BigTech companies (Facebook, Google, etc.)?”

  • Tim Bouma is interviewed by SSI Ambassador - Adrian Doerk

    Every technology is a two-edged sword, gunpowder, guns, you know anything? Theres an upside and theres the downside. I think thats something that we have to be very cognizant of.

  • The Domains of Identity and SSI with “Identity Woman”, Kaliya Young

    Kaliya and Oscar discuss the long-running Internet Identity Workshop (IIW) that she co-founded, the effects of moving to virtual identity conferences in 2020, insights from Kaliyas books The Domains of Identity, newly published in 2020, and A Comprehensive Guide to Self Sovereign Identity plus some great tips for all business leaders on how to view the role of identity in their organisation.

  • One womans open-source journey to decentralized identity Indicio

    Noha Abuaesh, a Bahrain-based computer scientist, has been exploring decentralized identity for the last year, often with assistance from Indicio.techs open-source tools and free communications channels.

  • Self-Sovereign Identity Authors Alex Preukschat & Shannon Appelcline Discussing

    Decentralized digital identity and verifiable credentials explain what Self-Sovereign Identity (SSI) is, why its important, and provide examples of practical applications for individuals and organizations.

An academic nerdy podcast, out of RMIT, Australia

Remembering Kim Cameron

I (Kaliya) will be working on a blog post for next week. For those of you who didnt know Kim Im very sad you will not get to meet him. He contributed greatly to our field. He was a good friend to many and a mentor and ally for women working in the field. His Laws of Identity shape and continue to shape our industry - in invite you to read peoples reflections to get a small sense of who he was.

Kim stood for all that is right in the intersection of technology and humanity.

Kim pushed constantly toward openness, inclusivity, compatibility, cooperation, and the need for individual agency and scale.

Kim might no longer update his blog, nudge identity products toward his vision or give inspiring, generous talks to audiences large and small, but his influence looms large in the identity industry an industry Kim changed forever.

Reification. I learned that word from Kim. In the immediate next breath he said from the stage that he was told not everyone knew what reify meant and that he would use a more approachable word: “thingify.” And therein I learned another lesson from Kim about how to present to an audience.

from the OpenID Summit Tokyo 2020 Keynote […] about Claims, Identity, Self-ness, Who-ness, and OpenID Connect and Decentralized Identity.

He always made sure that everyone was welcome, he brought people in and inspired them and suggested ways for them to be stars. He was kind, in a way that few people ever are.

He spoke to us twice in 2016, first as the Keynote for our Annual Summit “Beyond the Laws of Identity” referring to his ground-breaking work and taking us through what he felt he missed when he published his Laws. Kim spoke later on the importance of the community when he received recognition as a Founder of Canadas Digital Economy.

Kim joined us again in 2020, after he retired from Microsoft and gave a different sort of talk. His keynote at the IdentityNORTH Annual Summit was a sort of career retrospective

Kim attended nearly all the European Identity Conferences (EIC), from the very first one back in 2007, to 2019 and inspired us with his visionary, content-rich yet entertaining keynote talks and panel sessions. Have a look at his 2019 talk about privacy in the platform economy (“Turning the Web Right Side Up”, his visionary “Identity Services 2020” talk at EIC 2015, where he also reflected on 15 years

Not only did Kim “inject his 7 laws of identity into Microsofts DNA”, but did so throughout todays growing global digital identity ecosystem.

Kim was crafty. He not only injected his thinking into Microsoft; as a champion of the Identity Standards Community, Kim embedded his thinking into the standards that inform many of the identity systems operating at scale today.

If there was ever a person one could describe as being “full of life,” it was Kim Cameron. It was impossible to be around him without laughing and learning—usually at the same time.

Kim Cameron isn't on a mission from God, but he once played guitar with some guys who were.

Kim Cameron Memorials

I once asked Kim why there were so many Canadians working in digital identity. He replied: “Every day as a Canadian, you think What is it that makes me uniquely Canadian, as opposed to being American? Whereas Americans never give it a thought. Canadians are always thinking about identity.'”

Kim's technical excellence got him a seat at the table. His position at Microsoft gave him a big voice. But what made Kim effective was his gentle approach to technical discussions, especially those he thought might be contentious.

What I want to celebrate, however, isnt just Kims thoughts and works, but his example: of how an open and generous person in a giant company can use its power for good, and not play the heavy doing it. Thats what Kim did for the two decades he was the top architect of Microsofts approach to digital identity and meta systems

Enterprise

You will be able to learn how we can integrate existing centralized IDM solutions like Oracle Identity Cloud Service, OKTA identity Management, Sailpoint or Saviynt with SSI solutions like Hyperledger Aries, Spherity, or Trinsic to issue Verifiable credentials at the enterprise level as per business requirement.

This release includes major updates to the front-end Switchboard web application as well as the back-end libraries and components, giving companies access to the full suite features offered by legacy identity access management solutions in a decentralized architecture.

Its such a pressing issue that it was raised by the OECD and B20 (G20 business) just three months ago when they suggested a Global Value Chain (GVC) Passport.

  • GLEIF Press Release
  • Layering Digital ID on Top of Traditional Data Management HIP

    While Digital ID could offer benefit to humanitarian agencies and beneficiaries, alike, many questions remain to be answered. The cost effectiveness of ID solutions remains to be established. Given that many of these systems are only operating at pilot-scale, it is difficult to know what the primary drivers of cost are and how they can be mitigated. In addition, the digital ID space is fairly young and while initiatives like ID4D and ID2020 are working to drive meaningful interoperability among providers in the space, it remains to be seen what the most effective factors, in addition to open source software, open APIs, and common data formats, can be used to general meaningful interoperability.

  • Digital Caribou looks at the future trends impacting Digital Identity
    1. The state of the art in digital identification are trust frameworks that accommodate diverse technologies, systems and stakeholders
    2. Risks remain even within the most rigorous trust framework:
    3. Achieving inclusion requires addressing both technical and political dimensions
    4. Trust frameworks are complicated so getting governance right requires an ecosystems approach
    5. Building the future of digital identification means reckoning with an analogue past

Name of SSI