From Spruce:
"""
Spruce’s mission is to let users control their data across the web, and we
strongly believe that the W3C Decentralized Identifiers are critical to
achieving that. DIDs increase user choice, manage complexity across trust
models, and when used with adjacent specifications such as Verifiable
Credentials, can form the identity layer for a user-centric Internet. We
strongly support DID-Core’s transition to a Recommendation, and will
continue our contributions to the community.
-- Wayne Chang, Co-Founder and CEO, Spruce Systems, Inc.
"""
On Wed, Jul 13, 2022 at 11:47 AM Christopher Allen <
ChristopherA@lifewithalacrity.com> wrote:
> Brent, here is my contribution to the press release if it is useful to you:
>
> "DIDs are at the core of our next generation of digital identity on the
> internet. I'm thrilled that their recognition as an international standard.
> However, they are just the first step. In order to ensure a compassionate
> digital infrastructure that protects digital human rights, we need to
> design DID-centric architectures that fulfill their decentralized
> possibilities and minimize the identities and credentials that we share.
> We've laid a great foundation with the DID 1.0 spec; now we need to build
> on it." -- Christopher Allen, IETF TLS 1.0 co-editor, W3C DID spec
> co-author, and Principal Architect at Blockchain Commons.
>
> -- Christopher Allen
>
>>