- From: Melvin Carvalho <melvincarvalho@gmail.com>
- Date: Sun, 16 Nov 2025 19:49:22 +0100
- To: Steven Rowat <steven_rowat@sunshine.net>
- Cc: public-credentials@w3.org
- Message-ID: <CAKaEYhKud1PAgG1qJe5iqYfhzt-y=iiyzESztAKiDq+2=NxTow@mail.gmail.com>
so 15. 11. 2025 v 23:21 odesílatel Steven Rowat <steven_rowat@sunshine.net> napsal: > On 2025-11-14 11:50 pm, Amir Hameed wrote: > > > I have a good news, we finally have a production grade DID & VC based > passwordless authentication and authorization system which works in a zero > trust environment using a challenge response mechanism for authentication > and authorisation. SSI is real and it’s working here > > Try it : https://one.sirraya.org > > I did this, and found it admirably simple to create. > It is done by password. But passwords collide. > Leading me to: What's next? Where are you envisioning it will be used? > > Any general comments would be helpful. > > And, for example, is this a possible use case? : > > A publication like "The Atlantic" wishes to publish an article by someone > either pseudonymously or anonymously, but also check that the person has > some experience in the field they're writing about. I.e., They want to > accompany the article with a statement like: > > "Author X has published peer-reviewed work in this field in the past." > > So The Atlantic also needs to know, first, that this is indeed true. > > Can the Sirraya DID facilitate these needs, both for the author's transfer > of documents, and for the VCs required to ensure they have the relevant > experience? > > If so, what do the parties need to do to get such a system underway — the > writer of the document, and the publishers of the Atlantic? > > > Steven Rowat >
Received on Sunday, 16 November 2025 18:49:39 UTC