The issue with digital identity is that people don’t have a single, unified identity. Identity, like many things, is a social construct, not part of some natural order. As a dual national, I'm acutely aware that when and how I assert an identity credential, or characteristic, depends on context. Therefore, digital systems that help us assert these identities must be responsive to people’s contextual needs and under their control. Otherwise, we’re just building more surveillance tools.
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https://www.kalzumeus.com/2010/06/17/falsehoods-programmers-believe-about-names/
Maybe we should accept is some way to verify someone is the same person as we met before and let that be enough?
(Some self-generated cryptography public/private key system and maybe some way for other people to vouch for them would work for that.)
Maybe we can just accept that we will never solve this perfectly? Just one of those things which technology alone can't solve without causing way too much trouble for the weakest, easiest to exploit, least able to defend themselves people in our communities.
I think the only people who think mandatory online ID is a good idea r people who have no life out of work
because simpler is easier to design for than actual people are to control? (i hope)
@smallcircles Im still enraptured by the metaphysical insights from the Thomist Principle, Quidquid recipitur ad modum recipientis recipitur.
Peoples mental models are wildly different, it takes an awful lot of skill and insight to align perspectives and definitions.
Our curiosity towards #chaordic governance is appreciating autonomy gains from things such as Fediverse but recognising tradeoffs.
Its infinitely harder than narrow protocol design.
I can well imagine that. I gather that in order to get further on a healthy evolutionary trajectory for the fediverse, thoughts must be given to further improving the commons-based 'specification development process'.
If everything is free-range text, perceptions and opinions representing often narrow interests, then each get-together will lead to suboptimal outcomes. Each person leaves a discussion with own expectations of what was agreed upon, and what will happen next.