- From: Adrian Gropper <agropper@healthurl.com>
- Date: Sun, 29 Dec 2024 13:24:37 -0500
- To: Alan Karp <alanhkarp@gmail.com>
- Cc: "Michael Herman (Trusted Digital Web)" <mwherman@parallelspace.net>, Kishore Rajasekharuni <kishore.rajasekharuni@jukshio.com>, "public-credentials (public-credentials@w3.org)" <public-credentials@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CANYRo8iqMVtSJd6LazRTq+moW1-zFB6iF0_71JEAU8pjEJtYxg@mail.gmail.com>
… and some biometrics Adrian On Sun, Dec 29, 2024 at 1:15 PM Alan Karp <alanhkarp@gmail.com> wrote: > On Sun, Dec 29, 2024 at 2:29 AM Michael Herman (Trusted Digital Web) < > mwherman@parallelspace.net> wrote: > >> An interesting related question for a UX expert is: If DIDs are low-level >> technology artifacts, what are the best/most appropriate UX metaphors to >> surface in real apps? >> >> Petnames. A petname is a human meaningful string that is associated > one-to-one with an opaque identifier. > > -------------- > Alan Karp > > > On Sun, Dec 29, 2024 at 2:29 AM Michael Herman (Trusted Digital Web) < > mwherman@parallelspace.net> wrote: > >> An interesting related question for a UX expert is: If DIDs are low-level >> technology artifacts, what are the best/most appropriate UX metaphors to >> surface in real apps? >> >> Get Outlook for Android <https://aka.ms/AAb9ysg> >> ------------------------------ >> *From:* Michael Herman (Trusted Digital Web) <mwherman@parallelspace.net> >> *Sent:* Sunday, December 29, 2024 8:13:29 AM >> *To:* Kishore Rajasekharuni <kishore.rajasekharuni@jukshio.com> >> *Cc:* public-credentials (public-credentials@w3.org) < >> public-credentials@w3.org> >> *Subject:* Re: [External] Pop Quiz: Where do DIDs belong from an >> Enterprise Architecture perspective? >> >> Thank you for your analysis Kishore.When I say "DIDs", I'm being very >> literal: >> A DID = decentralized identifier = "did:wxyz:1234" character string. >> >> The answer to the question gets into the subtleties of decentralized >> identifiers (e.g. did:wxyz:1234). They are not intended to be >> human-friendly or comprehensible (like a checksum or a GUID); hence in my >> mind, they are low-level technical/infrastructure concepts/elements - at >> the very most, the lowest levels of your application architecture >> (admitting this is actually going too far IMO). >> >> It would be interesting to revisit how a platform like .NET abstracts an >> identifier up the chain into higher level application objects like an >> Identity or Principal (.NET terminology). >> >> Michael Herman >> CEO and First Principles Thinker >> Web 7.0 Foundation / Trusted Digital Web (TDW) >> >> Get Outlook for Android <https://aka.ms/AAb9ysg> >> ------------------------------ >> *From:* Kishore Rajasekharuni <kishore.rajasekharuni@jukshio.com> >> *Sent:* Friday, December 27, 2024 8:34:31 AM >> *To:* Michael Herman (Trusted Digital Web) <mwherman@parallelspace.net> >> *Cc:* public-credentials (public-credentials@w3.org) < >> public-credentials@w3.org> >> *Subject:* Re: [External] Pop Quiz: Where do DIDs belong from an >> Enterprise Architecture perspective? >> >> My understanding - DiD can be part of Party Management in the Business >> architecture layer. At the application architecture layer, it can be the >> Digital Identity module exposing APIs for Onboarding, Identity Proofing and >> Fraud Detection. The underlying Digital Identity Apps / Portals can be part >> of the Technology / Infrastructure architecture. >> >> regards >> Kishore >> >> On 27 Dec 2024, at 12:07 PM, Michael Herman (Trusted Digital Web) < >> mwherman@parallelspace.net> wrote: >> >> Are DIDs part of the: >> - Business architecture/layer/domain >> - Application architecture/layer/domain >> - Technology/Infrastructure architecture/layer/domain? >> >> Get Outlook for Android >> <https://www.google.com/url?q=https://aka.ms/AAb9ysg&source=gmail-imap&ust=1735886469000000&usg=AOvVaw3dZOsMm5uX8vKzgHgmZY6E> >> >> >>
Received on Sunday, 29 December 2024 18:24:52 UTC