Andrew Conner pfp
Andrew Conner
@acon
Alright, maybe this is the point of Farcaster/etc, but I've been thinking about public infrastructure lately — w.r.t. tech, how lucky we were to have the web (HTTP), email, SSL certs, etc. Lucky, because we got far enough where no one can own it, and everyone diffusely gets to benefit. So, what did we miss? Identity
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Andrew Conner pfp
Andrew Conner
@acon
DNS for people, privacy agnostic (can be anonymous, or very much not). Like an email address, trust is delegated via the domain, so I know at least you could register a Gmail account, I can see your / your company's web site, etc.
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Andrew Conner pfp
Andrew Conner
@acon
Likewise, governments can be authorities. Replace the whole SSN = private key for government purposes. But other authorities could exist — perhaps I could go to a local notary, show an ID, and get a digital ID. Then, it becomes a lot easier to build proof-of-human services.
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Andrew Conner pfp
Andrew Conner
@acon
I could register on a Mastodon server that is very anti-spam that requires me to sign with an "authorized" account. Or Twitter could have a badge for "real person" accounts. And perhaps in a way that's privacy preserving (they can tell I did it, but can't tell what my underlying account is. or not?).
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Andrew Conner pfp
Andrew Conner
@acon
And of course, there'd be no-authority throwaway identities (like throwaway email accounts from no-name providers). Account recovery could be owned by the authority. Profiles could be like DNS records — I could include an email, social links, convey delegated trust to other profiles, etc.
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Andrew Conner pfp
Andrew Conner
@acon
If I lose my drivers license, I go to a sufficiently trusted third party (the DMV), and with enough evidence, they'll give me a new one. Same for this, for the authorities that are designed for proof-of-human.
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Andrew Conner pfp
Andrew Conner
@acon
Is anyone working on this? I'm aware of ENS, but this idea goes way further and less about crypto (in fact, not positive you even need a blockchain). We're *so* lucky we got email. If AOL/Compuserv/etc succeeded, or Google Wave succeeded, etc, we'd be in a way worse, less free place. But we should want more!
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