- From: Dan Kioria <dankioria@gmail.com>
- Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2023 11:37:45 +0300
- To: public-fedid@w3.org
- Message-ID: <CAOuH79EqMoEmRf2nfDTm08wpqCWd4wyeJuNF7+tUG=TuxsDorQ@mail.gmail.com>
Principles of Self-Sovereign Identity vs Laws of Identity. Principles of SSI by Christopher Allen Laws of Identity by the late Kim Cameron Two approaches to digital identity, security, and privacy, 15 years apart. https://dankioria.com/a-comparison-of-christopher-allens-principles-of-identity-and-kim-camerons-laws-of-identity/ In summary, "Principal Authority" and "The Laws of Identity" significantly differ in areas of focus. In “Principal Authority” Christopher Allen primarily focuses on legal and legislative frameworks behind self-sovereign identity. In “Laws of Identity” Kim Cameron focuses on setting the groundwork for ensuring internet users can interact with a sense of trust, privacy, and security. The recommended solutions are not exactly similar, but they are all geared toward achieving trustworthy, secure, and privacy-preserving digital identity systems. That being said, both papers share several concerns, recommendations, and principles. In hindsight, these are two writers tackling the same problem at different times and circumstances. The digital identity world has made significant leaps since 2005. The late Kim Cameron foresaw most of the challenges that Christopher Allen addresses in his paper. However, Cameron may not have seen the depth of the challenges the same way Christopher Allen saw them 15 years later. Both Principles of SSI and Laws of Identity are focused on protecting the person identified. I feel that most digital identity meta-systems have not adequately considered the needs of relying parties. Once the person identified is protected, who protects the relying parties? Don’t you want to be able to trust the claims and representations made by the other party just as much as you want privacy and anonymity for yourself? And aren’t we all relying parties? Dan Kioria
Received on Wednesday, 22 March 2023 08:38:10 UTC