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Awesome Decentralized Identity
DID, Blockchain and Self-Sovereign Identity Resources
Imagine a world where you are in direct control of your personal information; a world where you can limit and control how much information you share while retaining the ability to transact in the world. This is self-sovereign identity, and it is already here. Blockchain is the underlying technology paving the path to self-sovereign identity through decentralized networks. It ensures privacy and trust, where transactions are secure, authenticated and verifiable and endorsed by relevant, permissioned participants. -Jerry Cuomo (IBM)
Link Shorthand:
[T]witter [G]ithub [B]log [wp] whitepaper [D]ocumentation [F]orums [C]hat
[ϟ] related resource [>] related section [^] back to the contents.
Contents
- A Note from the Editor
- History
- Resources
- Self Sovereign Identity—SSI
- RWoT Whitepapers
- W3C and DID Related Standards
- Evernym
- The Sovrin Foundation
- Hyperledger Indy
- IBM
- Ethereum—Protocol
- State Sanctioned Identity Initiatives
- Assorted Decentralized \ Blockchain ID Related
- Humanitarian
- Structured Data Standards
- Decentralized Public Key Infrastructure (DPKI)
- Personal Data: Wallets, Marketplaces, etc
- GDPR
- Reports
- Research Papers
- Videos
- Podcasts
- Sources
A Note from the Editor^
Thanks to those who are working to make our identity experience, and the internet, a better place.
—Information is not so easily organized in a linear fashion. This list is a by-product of a few clients asking me to wrie about Hyperledger Indy, which resulted in having me write a few more, that resulted in the inspiration to enter all of the best blockchain, self-sovereign, and decentralized identity links into a database; to power a web-app for search, navigation by tags, etc. The SuperSource app will have comments, submissions, ratings and reactions; so that it can become a collabroative effort among anyone who gets involved. Furthermore, the Crypto Library—SuperSource is a growing collection of all types of crypto related information, not only ID.
In the mean-time, after gathering all of the links I had already into one collection, I knew I could make an awesome list out of them sooner than a live demo of the app that is in progress. Now, of course, there are many more links than I began with; and it was already a bit more expansive than typical Awesome lists, then. Pehaps this would be better called "epic-decentralized-id" or is that too much?
I'm also working on /awesome-sovrin as a place to focus more on the Sovrin\Indy protocol and ecosystem, and have spent some time doing upkeep on /peacekeeper/blockchain-identity. I hope for these lists to compliment each-other.
For now, I'm becoming more familiar with all of this material, and how it fits together in the decentralized identity space. This is a work in progress, that I expect to be actively engaged with for the next month or so. Within that time it should become a more organized space, and easier for contributors to get involved.
History^
- A Brief History of Digital Identity
- A Step Back in Time: The History and Evolution of Digital Identity
This isn't a firm historical outline, just enough to provide context for the rest.
Internet Identity Workshop^
In 2005, Kaliya Young[T], Phil Windley[T], Drummond Reed[T][B], and Doc Searls[T][B] hosted the first Internet Identity Workshop(IIW)[T] in Berkeley to discuss "architectural and governance proposals for Internet-wide identity services and their underlying philosophies." -Announcing IIW 2005
Since then, the IIW has met bi-anually, actively supporting the development of the identity software-ecosystem, including OpenID('05), OpenID 2.0('06), OAuth('10), FIDO('13) and OpenID Connect('14).
IIW participants began the effort towards creating a truly "user centric identity," in contrast to identity solutions whos focus has been fulfilling the needs of the enterprise. The pioneers of decentralized identity have long struggled against the "identity silo paradox," that while the identerati continually work on solutions to break up these silos, the enterprise has had a strong financial incentive to retain them.
- Not Just Who They Say We Are: Claiming our identity on the Internet- short film on the “Identerati” of the IIW[ϟ]
- identirati[ϟ] is a term for those working on standards and methods based on the premise of opening up id data silos, dating back to at least 2006:
- More information on iid standards history:
IIW-Wiki ϟ identitywoman.net ϟ windley.com/tags/identity ϟ WoTinfo
In April of 2014, the European Parliament demonstrates strong support for the GDPR, which passes back and forth through the European Council, Commision and Parliment throught the rest of the year.
8/14 The Credentials Community Group[ϟ] forms, hosted by World Wide Web Consortium(W3C)[T][G] : "to forge a path for a secure, decentralized system of credentials that would empower both individual people and organizations on the Web to store, transmit, and receive digitally verifiable proof of qualifications and achievements." —proposed by Manu Sporney[T] (of digitalbazaar.com)
What is Sovereign Source Authority? shows an early use of 'sovereign' in relation to our internet identities. The term "Self Sovereign Identity" started becoming widely used in 2014.[ϟ][ϟ]
Bitnation and the United Nations^
9\15 Bitnation "seeks to establish the concept of 'world citizenship' via a bitcoin based identity, offering 'Blockchain Emergency IDs' to refugees.[ϟ]
The same month, the UN unveiled it's Agenda for Sustainable Development:
- Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels
- Substantially reduce corruption and bribery in all their forms Develop effective, accountable and transparent institutions at all levels
- By 2030, provide legal identity for all, including birth registration
- Ensure public access to information and protect fundamental freedoms, in accordance with national legislation and international agreements—(emphasis mine)
- DIGITAL IDENTITY AS A BASIC HUMAN RIGHT
- AID:Tech [T] — "is a voucher and digital identity solution for refugees. A digital record of a person's identity is stored on a smart card, along with various additional information. Blockchain technology is used to distribute all resources in a highly traceable manner." (another early example of blockchain for humanitarian aide)
Rebooting the Web Of Trust^
In relation to SSI, 'Web of Trust' is a network of relationships that attest to our identity claims. Each party attesting to your identity information becomes a strand in your web of trust.
The first Rebooting Web of Trust(RWoT) workshop was held during November 2015; attracting the likes of Vitalik Buterin, Peter Todd, Gregory Maxwell, Joel Dietz, Christopher Allen, and Jon Callas, according to Andreas Antonopolis.
That workshop, produced 5 technical white papers:
5 WoT-usecases ϟ Decentralized PKI ϟ Smart Signatures ϟ Creating a New World of Trust
The Web of Trust is a buzzword for a new model of decentralized self-sovereign identity. It’s a phrase that dates back almost twenty-five years, the classic definition derives from PGP [...] the vibrant blockchain community is also drawing new attention to the concept we aim to reboot it. - Rebranding the Web of Trust
At the end of 2015, the Department of Homeland Security announced that it had funds available for the development of Blockchain Security and Identity Verification Technologies.
ID2020 and the GDPR^
- 4/16 the EU adopted the GDPR, to be enacted as law May 2018.
- The second RWoT workshop ran in conjunction with the UN's ID2020 Summit in New York that May and was clearly a significant time for decentralized identity:
1.1 Billion people live without an officially recognized identity — This lack of recognized identification deprives them of protection, access to services, and basic rights. ID2020 is a public-private partnership dedicated to solving the challenges of identity for these people through technology. - id2020.org
- Identity Crisis: Clear Identity through Correlation
- Christopher Allen[T][G] details the overarching history of internet idenitity standards in his seminal work (submitted to ID2020\RWoT workshop):
- The Path to Self-Soverereign Identity[ϟ] details the history of identity standards leading up to self-sovereign and details the 10 principles of self-sovereign identity.
I am part of the team putting together the first ID2020 Summit on Digital Identity at the United Nations
- The Path to Self-Soverereign Identity[ϟ] details the history of identity standards leading up to self-sovereign and details the 10 principles of self-sovereign identity.
- Identity System Essentials 3/16 (Original Evernym Identity WP also submitted to ID2020\RWoT workshop)
Evident from other whitepapers submitted to the RWoT\ID2020 Workshop, the DID identifier had begun to emerge:
- Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) and Decentralized Identity Management (DIDM)
"Decentralized Identifiers (DID) stored in a permissioned blockchain enable principals to directly control their own identities with cryptographic proofs and secure, addressable network endpoints. DIDs further enable a Decentralized Identity Management (DIDM) infrastructure that will empower people and organizations to securely and confidentially manage and assert their identities."
- Requirements for DIDs
"Respect Network is conducting a research project for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, HSHQDC-16-C-00061, to analyze the applicability of blockchain technologies to a decentralized identifier system. Our thesis is that blockchains, or more generically distributed ledgers, are a potentially powerful new tool for “identity roots” — the starting points for an Internet identity. However “blockchain identity” may not fully address the core security and privacy principles needed in a complete identity system. In this case DIDs — Decentralized Identifiers rooted on a distributed ledger — may end up being a foundational building block for higher level identity management solutions. -
- At this point in time DLT innovation, the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, and the EU GDPR all came together supporting a core identirati tenant: Eliminating id data silos and empowering users regarding digital identity.
The Story of Open SSI Standards - Drummond Reed/Evernym
Decentralized Identity Foundation^
- On May 22 at Consensus 2017 the formation of the Decentralized Identity Foundation (DIF) was announced
- Conensus 2017 - Building an Foundation for Decentralized Identity (video)
- Decentralized Identity Foundation (DIF) [G] [T] [B]
A key piece of the decentralized identity equation is how people, organizations, and devices can be identified and located without centralized systems of identifiers (e.g. email addresses). DIF members are actively working on protocols and implementations that enable creation, resolution, and discovery of decentralized identifiers and names across decentralized systems, like blockchains and distributed ledgers.
- DIF members sharing the goal of “building an open source decentralized identity ecosystem for people, organizations, apps, and devices” include:
- Microsoft ϟ uPort ϟ IBM ϟ Sovrin ϟ SecureKey ϟ Blockstack ϟ Evernym ϟ Hyperledger ϟ Civic ϟ Accenture ϟ Danube ϟ netki ϟ RSA ϟ Consent ϟ IOTA ϟ Mooti ϟ R3 ϟ Authenteq ϟ Blockchain-foundry ϟ Validatedid ϟ 1kosmos ϟ gamecredits[ϟ] ϟ auth0 ϟ Jolocom ϟ Enigma ϟ Humanized-internet ϟ Pillar ϟ id2020 ϟ Nuggets ϟ Tierion ϟ British Columbia Ministry of Citizens Services ϟ Gem ϟ aetna ϟ Equinix ϟ KYC-Chain ϟ BlockPass ϟ Ockam ϟ NuID ϟ MetaX ϟ GS1 ϟ DIID ϟ nuggets ϟ Trusted key ϟ zinc ϟ ONTology ϟ Mastercard ϟ LNk-E ϟ ID2020 ϟ Veridium ϟ Meeco ϟ Dominode ϟ Enigma ϟ datum ϟ Onfido ϟ identos ϟ diwala ϟ <sitekit> ϟ suru ϟ botlabs ϟ enterprise ethereum alliance ϟ remme ϟ Taqanu ϟ Distributed ID ϟ R_Block ϟ Ideo ϟ BigchainDB ϟ One Kosmos
- Decentralized Identity Foundation Grows To 56 Members In Our First Year
- A Universal Resolver for self-sovereign identifiers [>]
Resources
Self Sovereign Identity^
- The Path to Self-Soverereign Identity
- WebOfTrustInfo/self-sovereign-id
- Self-Sovereign Identity: Why Blockchain?
- A Technlogy-Free Definition of Self-Sovereign Identity (SSI)
- Inevitable Rise of Self-Sovereign Identity
- Self-Sovereign Identity Principles
- 7 Myths of Self Sovereign Identity
- SSI Meetup
- Self-Sovereign Identity — wiki.p2pfoundation
0/ “Self-Sovereign Identity: A Progress Report”…
— Christopher Allen (@ChristopherA) April 25, 2018
Selected 'Rebooting Web of Trust' Whitepapers^
- WebofTrust.info/papers.html
- Rebranding the Web of Trust Original RWoT whitepaper
- Framework for the Comparison of Identity Systems
- A Primer on Functional Identity
- The DCS Theorem — We use the triangle to show decentralized consensus systems can have Decentralization, Consensus, or Scale, but not all three properties simultaneously.
- Decentralized Key Management System
- Rebooting the Web of Trust VII: Toronto (September 2018) - More recent thoughts.
- SSI: A Roadmap for Adoption
RWoT Use Cases^
- Amira 1.0
- Re-Imagining What Users Really Want
- Joram 1.0.0
- Powering the Physician-Patient Relationship with HIE of One Blockchain Health IT
- Protecting Digital Identities in Developing Countries
- Opportunities Created by the Web of Trust for Controlling and Leveraging Personal Data
W3C and DID Related Standards^
- World Wide Web Consortium(W3C) [T] [G]
- Credentials Community Group[B]
- JSON-LD 1.0, W3C Recommendation
- opencreds.org — Identity Credentials 1.0
- DIGITAL VERIFICATION COMMUNITY GROUP[G]
DID the Decentralized Identifier^
- A Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace <-DID's modeled after
- w3c- Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) v0.11
- Authors:
- Drummond Reed (Evernym)
- Manu Sporny (Digital Bazaar)
- Dave Longley (Digital Bazaar)
- Christopher Allen (Blockstream)
- Ryan Grant
- Markus Sabadello (Danube Tech)
- Authors:
- DID Primer [ϟ]
- Decentralized IDentifers (DIDs)
- Requirements for DIDs
- DIDs in DPKI
- A Universal Resolver for self-sovereign identifiers [G]
Hubs \ Agents^
- On DIF Hubs and Sovrin Agents
- Identity Hubs Capabilities Perspective - Identity Hubs currently proposed in the Decentralized Identity Foundation (DIF) are a subset of a general Decentralized Identifier (DID).
DID Auth^
Verifiable Claims^
DID Adoption ^
- @ChristopherA on DID adoption
"22/ Over a dozen companies and organizations, using multiple blockchains (Bitcoin, Ethereum, Hyperledger, etc.), have committed to deploying DIDs, including IBM, Microsoft, Digital Bazaar, Consensys, Evernym, Learning Machine, British Columbia, and more:" —How blockchain could solve the internet privacy problem
- Veres One DID Method 1.0 [veres.one][D] — a permissionless public ledger designed specifically for the creation and management of decentralized identifiers (DIDs)
- Blockstack DID Spec[ϟ] Blockstack is a network for decentralized applications where users own their identities and data. Blockstack utilizes a public blockchain to implement a decentralized naming layer, which binds a user's human-readable username to their current public key and a pointer to their data storage buckets.
- BTCR DID Method — The Bitcoin Reference DID method (did:btcr) supports DIDs on the public Bitcoin blockchain. The Bitcoin Reference method has minimal design goals: a DID trust anchor based on the Bitcoin blockchain, updates publicly visible and auditable via Bitcoin transactions, and optionally, additional DID Document information referenced in the transaction OP_RETURN data field. No other Personal Identifiable Information (PII) would be placed on the immutable blockchain.
- Interplanetary Identifiers IPID - Implementation of the DID spec over IPFS (Interplanetary File System)
- Spidchain [wp]
- "offers a platform for self-sovereign identity, including desktop and mobile apps for end-users. It uses Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) - backed by optionally Bitcoin or Ethereum - to implement a marketplace for verifiable claims. The Spidchain applications allow individuals to create, recover, and revoke DIDs, to authenticate, to sign and verify files and claims, and more."
- U.S. Department of Homeland Security funds four Blockchains
- IBM-Paving the Road to Self-Sovereign Identity with Blockchain, Open Standards
- SecureKey: partners with IBM to enable a new digital identity and attribute sharing network based on Hyperledger Fabric blockchain.
- Microsoft: Decentralized Identity—Own and control your identity [ϟ]
- Identity at Coinbase: Welcoming the Distributed Systems team
Evernym^
- Evernym [T] [G] Founded in 2013
- Identity System Essentials (Original Evernym Identity WP submitted to ID2020\RWoT) 3/2016
- The Three Models of Digital Identity Relationships — How self-sovereign identity (SSI) is different, and why it’s better
- Is Self-Sovereign Identity the ultimate GDPR compliance tool? [1\3] [2] [3]
- /awesome-sovrin
The Sovrin Foundation^
- [F]orum [C]hat [T]witter [G]ithub
- Founded in September 2016, The Sovrin Foundation is creating a public instance of the Hyperledger Indy code, initially developed by Evernym
- Sovrin Library
- Getting Started with Sovrin
- Sovrin: A Protocol and Token for Self-Sovereign Identity and Decentralized Trust
- Sovrin Network: What Goes on the Ledger?
- Sovrin Governance Framework
- How Sovrin Works—A Technical Guide from the Sovrin Foundation
- /awesome-sovrin - See here for additional Sovrin related material.
Selected articles from Windley.com ^
- An Internet for Identity
- A Universal Trust Framework
- Building Your Business on Sovrin: Domain-Specific Trust Frameworks
- The Sovrin Foundation
- Decentralization in Sovrin
- Self-Sovereign Identity and the Legitimacy of Permissioned Ledgers
- The Sovrin Ecosystem (Disambiguating between Evernym, Sovrin, and Indy)
Hyperledger Indy^
- Hyperledger Indy - Distributed Ledger and Utility Library [T] [wiki] [G]
- Hyperledger Indy — the Future of Decentralized Identity
- indy.readthedocs.io (under construction)
- Hyperledger Welcomes Project Indy - ANN
- Ernesto.net - What goes on the Ledger
- Ernesto.net - Hyperledger Indy Architecture
- The Rise of Self-Sovereign Identity - Hyperledger Indy
- Plenum Bzantine Fault Tolerant Protocol
- "Byzantine fault tolerance is a sub-field of fault tolerance research inspired by the Byzantine Generals' Problem, which is a generalized version of the Two Generals' Problem."
- The Linux Foundation's Blockchain for Business edx course may be freely audited and has a section on Indy.
- Implementing Privacy by Design in Hyperledger Indy
- Verified Organization Network [G] [>]
- "an initiative by the government of British Columbia to create a trusted network of organizational data. It allows organizations to claim credentials that are part of their own digital identity, using a component called TheOrgBook that lists entities with their associated public verifiable claims."
- Demonstrating the Verifiable Organizations Network (VON)
- /awesome-sovrin - See here for additional indy related material.
IBM^
- Paving the Road to Self-Sovereign Identity with Blockchain, Open Standards
- github.com/IBM-Blockchain-Identity (Docker based tutorial sandbox env)
- How do we start tackling the existing identity problem
- Swipe Right on Verifiably Credentials
- WISeKey fully deployed its CertifyID integrating Digital Identity with Blockchain technology
- SecureKey: partners with IBM to enable a new digital identity and attribute sharing network based on Hyperledger Fabric blockchain.
Ethereum^
- Decentralized Digital Identity on Ethereum -SlideShare
- ERC725 ϟ ERC735
- proposals in the Ethereum community to standardize smart contracts for certain identity-related operations such as key management, as well as signing transactions, documents, and "claims", which may be attested by third parties or self-asserted.
- ERC: Lightweight Identity #1056 —This ERC describes a standard for creating and updating identities with a limited use of blockchain resources. An identity can have an unlimited number of delegates and attributes associated with it. Identity creation is as simple as creating a regular key pair ethereum account, which means that it's fee (no gas costs) and all ethereum accounts are valid identities. Furthermore this ERC is fully DID compliant.
- Proof-of-Individuality — how to prove a person only has one account
- Managing Identity with a UI—ERC-725
- Ethereum ERC725 Blockchain Based, Self-Sovereign Identity Management
- DEVCON1: Digital Identity — video from DEVCON1
Ethereum Identity Applications^
- uPort [G] [T]
- Deloitte SmartID [G]
- "Smart Identity uses the Ethereum blockchain to represent an identity using a smart contract, attributes can be added by the identity owner and are stored in hash form"
- Nuggets [wp]
- "is a blockchain platform giving users a single biometric tool for login, payment and identity verification. It stores an individual's information in a "personal cloud" in "zero-knowledge blockchain storage".
- Jolocom
- a "SmartWallet" for everyone to own their personal digital identity, using Social Linked Data, WebID, and verifiable claims standards via Ethereum smart contracts.
- Democracy Earth Foundation [G]
- developing Sovereign, a blockchain direct democracy tool using "vote" tokens to grant democratic participation rights to every human. A proof-of-individuality (POI) process based on peer-to-peer validation establishes that a self-sovereign identity is uniquely tied to a single person. The project introduces a number of interesting socio-technical concepts such as "Social Smart Contract", "Initial Rights Offering", and "Cryptographically Induced Equality". Cooperation is happening with other decentralized identity initiatives such as Blockstack and uPort.
- poa.network[D] POA Network is an Ethereum-based platform that offers an open-source framework for smart contracts. POA Network is a sidechain to Ethereum utilizing Proof of Authority as its consensus mechanism.
State Led Initiatives^
- Identity Validation as a Public Sector Digital Service?
- EU BLOCKCHAIN OBSERVATORY AND FORUM—Workshop Report e-Identity
Canada ^
- White Paper: Canada’s Digital ID Future - A Federated Approach
- BCGov Verifiable Organization Network – Impressive Client Demo
- Verified Organization Network [G]
- "an initiative by the government of British Columbia to create a trusted network of organizational data. It allows organizations to claim credentials that are part of their own digital identity, using a component called TheOrgBook that lists entities with their associated public verifiable claims."
Netherlands^
- TU Delft helps develop digital ID for use on your phone
- Self-Sovereign Identity Systems for Humanitarian Interventions—A Case Study on Protective Cash Transfer Programs
- Deployment of a Blockchain-Based Self-Sovereign Identity - Delft
- TrustChain: A Sybil-resistant scalable blockchain - Presentation
- Dutch Blockchain Coalition [ϟ]
USA^
- Illinois Blockchain Initiative — partners with Evernym to launch birth registration pilot
- U.S. Department of Homeland Security funds four Blockchains
Spain^
- Alastria [G]
- a non-profit consortium building a national blockchain ecosystem for Spain. The security and veracity of information will be ensured through the identification of natural and legal persons, while at the same time allowing citizens to have control over their personal information in a transparent way following the guidelines set by the European Union.
Switzerland^
- Zug ID: Exploring the First Publicly Verified Blockchain Identity (uport\ethereum)
Estonia^
Blockchain ID Initiatives ^
- Danube Tech — digital identity and personal data, including personal agents, semantic graphs, and blockchain [xdi] [navigator]
- Founded by Markus Sabadello (Peacekeeper) [T] [G] [B]
- Identity at Coinbase: Welcoming the Distributed Systems team [ϟ]
- Shocard — "Blockchain-Based Mobile Identity Platform"
- Authenteq [T] [G]
- enables users to create their own sovereign digital IDs which are stored encrypted on BigChainDB
- JLinc — registers cryptographic public keys on the Stellar blockchain.
"The founders have been at the center of a community of developers working on “user-centric digital identity for almost two decades."
- Internet of People — "an open, decentralized infrastructure consisting of device-to-device communication, blockchain tokens, profile servers, and other components." -Founded by Fermat
- Civic launches: identity.com[G][B]
- Mooti [D]
- offers an "identity chain" technology that makes it possible to issue and revoke verified claims using elliptic curve cryptography (curve25519, secp256k1) and includes privay-enhancing features
- Spidchain [wp]
- "offers a platform for self-sovereign identity, including desktop and mobile apps for end-users. It uses Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) - backed by optionally Bitcoin or Ethereum - to implement a marketplace for verifiable claims. The Spidchain applications allow individuals to create, recover, and revoke DIDs, to authenticate, to sign and verify files and claims, and more."
- Cicada
- a Dapp platform built for a "direct democracy." envisions using iris scans to generate decentralized universal identifiers ("HUIDs") for every human on the planet, a method referred to as "biocryptics". "HUIDs" can have "sub-IDs" to support selective disclosure. PII can be stored in an "info wallet". Key parts of the system also include smart contracts, zero-knowledge proofs, mixnets, and more."
- Keyp —"Welcome to Europe’s fastest growing open digital identity ecosystem."
- I/O Digital Foundation [wp]
- "offers a Proof-of-Stake blockchain called Decentralised Input Output Name Server (DIONS). It will enable applications such as identity and alias registration, storage of legal documents, key exchange, and encrypted messaging."
Humanitarian^
- iRespond -international non-profit organization dedicated to solving the identity problem using a unique digital biometric identity solution
- The Humanized Internet — "to defend the rights of vulnerable people, and give every human being worldwide secure, sovereign control over their own digital identity."
- CheapID - identity standard designed for use in conflicted environment like those many refugees or disaster victims may find themselves in.
- World Identity Netowork
- Blockchain for Impact (BFI)-UN
Structured Data Standards^
- Blockcerts — open standard for issuing and verifying blockchain-based official records; The project offers open-source libraries, tools, and mobile apps. MIT has issued digital certificates based on this standard.
- Schema — a collaborative, community activity with a mission to create, maintain, and promote schemas for structured data on the Internet. Schema.org vocabulary can be used with many different encodings, including RDFa, Microdata and JSON-LD. These vocabularies cover entities, relationships between entities and actions, and can easily be extended through a well-documented extension model. Over 10 million sites use Schema.org to markup their web pages and email messages. Many applications from Google, Microsoft, Pinterest, Yandex and others already use these vocabularies to power rich, extensible experiences."
- DIDs[>] and Verifiable Claims of the W3C [>]
Decentralized Public Key Infrastructure DPKI^
- Blockstack — [G]ithub [F]orum [B]log [T]witter
- a network of computers that collectively maintain a global registry of domain names, public keys, and cryptographic hashes. With this registry, Blockstack serves as a decentralized domain name system (DNS) and a decentralized public key infrastructure (PKI).
- Onename — "a product built on Blockstack that allows people to register identities"
- Decentralized Public Key Infrastructure
- DIDs in DPKI
- SCPKI: A Smart Contract-based PKI and Identity System
- KeyChains: A Decentralized Public-Key Infrastructure
- ClaimChain: Decentralized Public Key Infrastructure
- A Decentralized Public Key Infrastructure with Identity Retention
- Privacy based decentralized Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) implementation using Smart contract in Blockchain
Personal Data: Wallets, Marketplaces, etc.^
- Mydata [T] [D] [D]
- goal: to empower individuals with their personal data, thus helping them and their communities develop knowledge, make informed decisions, and interact more consciously and efficiently with each other as well as with organisations."
- Consent[ϟ] — "platform for trusted personal data applications and services, using Ethereum smart contracts to implement decentralized identifiers, verified credentials, consent receipts, a web of trust, and exchange of assets and value."
- Pillar Project [wp]
- planning to offer a "Personal Data Locker" consisting of a wallet, browser, and token exchange. Personal assets will be put on a blockchain, and "Pillar" tokens will be issued."
- Aversafe —"allows individuals to store personal details, work history, certificates and achievements. It leverages a permissioned blockchain for trusted audit and participation in the storage of attestation data separate from the actual data stored"
- Datum [wp]
- "network allows anyone to store structured data on a smart contract blockchain. Data can optionally be bought and sold on a marketplace using the DAT token. Datum leverages BigchainDB and IPFS as data storage backends. All data is encrypted and protected using AES256-GCM.
- ONTology [G]— "a "Distributed Trust Network" which combines a cross-chain identity system, peer-to-peer data transmission, data authorization mechanisms, distributed data storage, attestation, and various industry-specific modules. It also includes an Ontology Crypto Package (OCP) and an Ontology Marketplace (OM)."
- We can do better than selling our data-Doc Searls(IIW)
- Pro-civis — "e-government as a service" platform called "eID+". It enables citizens to get an official, electronic Citizen-ID on a mobile app.
- The platform includes the Vetri wallet and marketplace. 'Earn extra income and rewards by joining the data economy.'"
2018 Identity Landsacpe brought to you by: One World Identity — independent advisory and digital strategy consultancy focused on trust and the data economy.
EU General Data Protection Regulation Act^
- Blockchains and Data Protection in the European Union
- IBM — How blockchain could address five areas associated with GDPR compliance
- GDPR - A reflection on the 'self-sovereign identity' and the Blockchain
- GDPR and Privacy by Design, What developers need to know
- Privacy by Design The 7 Foundational Principles
- When GDPR Becomes Real, and Blockchain is no longer fairydust
- Self-Sovereign Privacy By Design
- Is Self-Sovereign Identity the ultimate GDPR compliance tool? [1\3] [2] [3]
Reports^
- EU BLOCKCHAIN OBSERVATORY AND FORUM — Workshop Report — e-Identity, Brussels, November 7, 2018
- A Comprehensive Evaluation of the Identity Management Utility Sovrin
- How Blockchain Revolutionizes Identity Management
- Digital Identity: the current state of affairs
- Blockchain: Evolving Decentralized Identity Design
- White Paper: Canada’s Digital ID Future - A Federated Approach
- IDENTITY MATTERS
- Accenture: ID2020: DIGITAL IDENTITY with Blockchain and Biometrics
- Privacy-Preserving Authentication, Another Reason to Care about Zero-Knowledge Proofs —slideshare
- r3- Identity in Depth
- Global Blockchain Identity Management Market 2018-2022
- A Comprehensive Guide to Self Sovereign Identity - by Kaliya 'Identity Woman' Young and Heather Vescent
Assorted Thoughts
- Decentralized Identity Trilemma
There seems to exist a trilemma in decentralized identity analogous to @Zooko's triangle. None of the existing solutions are at the same time: 1) privacy-preserving, 2) Sybil-resistant 3) self-sovereign -[T]
- Maciek Laskus ϟ BLOCKWALKS (video)
- "I designed an algorithm that mapped out people working on identity using Twitter data:" Identity list
- Proof of Thought (PoT)
- Queer Privacy
Stories about using the Internet as a tool to find out more about yourself, and as a tool to express and empower; about the dangers of Internet censorship and about the practical realities of maintaining multiple distinct digital identities.
- @SarahJamieLewis Twitter thread on Identity
Any technology which relies on the existence of, or attempts to create a, global, unique identity is oppressive by design. Stop" innovating" oppressive structures.
Research-Papers^
- Establishing Identity Without Certification Authorities
- A First Look at Identity Management Schemes on the Blockchain
- ChainAnchor — Anonymous Identities for Permissioned Blokchains
- Decentralizing Privacy: Using Blockchain to Protect Personal Data
- TOWARDS SELF-SOVEREIGN IDENTITY USING BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY
- Self-sovereign Identity – Opportunities and Challenges for the Digital Revolution
- The Knowledge Complexity Of Interactive Proofs
- A Conceptual Analysis on Sovrin
- Blockchain for Identity Management - Details early efforts towards Blockchain-ID
- Evernym Research Collection 2016 Archive
Video^
- SSI Meetup Youtube Channel
- The Story of Open SSI Standards - Drummond Reed
- Is Blockchain the Future of Digital Identity? -CB Insights
- Identity and Blockchain Technology
- Phil Windley on the Sovrin Network
- Decentralized Identifiers enable self-sovereign identity - MyData 2018
- eIDAS and Self-Sovereign Identity - MyData 2018
- uPort: Self-Sovereign Identity Meets Portable Data
- MyData Global Youtube
- Phil Windley on Vimeo
- Internet of Agreements Conference on Identity
Podcasts^
- State of Identity
- Analytics Neat—Episode 37: What is a Decentralized Identity (DID)?
- State Change #41 Unpacking Digital Identity
- MyData Podcast
Sources^
- /awesome-sovrin
- IIW-Wiki
- wiki.idcommons.net
- /WebOfTrustInfo
- /peacekeeper/blockchain-identity
- /blockchain-id.toml
- identitywoman.net
- windley.com/tags/identity
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