Decentralized, Self-Sovereign, Consortium: The Future of Digital Identity in Canada

This article introduces how SecureKey Technologies Inc. (SecureKey) worked with various network participants and innovation partners alongside government, corporate, and consumer-focused collaborators, in a consortium approach to create a mutually beneficial network of self-sovereign identity (SSI)...

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Main Author: Andre Boysen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Blockchain
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbloc.2021.624258/full
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spelling doaj-d2e96f363c8f4d5d80ce8b3e64ecf3ec2021-04-29T09:58:59ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Blockchain2624-78522021-04-01410.3389/fbloc.2021.624258624258Decentralized, Self-Sovereign, Consortium: The Future of Digital Identity in CanadaAndre Boysen0Andre Boysen1SecureKey Technologies Inc., Toronto, ON, CanadaCentre for International Governance Innovation, Waterloo, ON, CanadaThis article introduces how SecureKey Technologies Inc. (SecureKey) worked with various network participants and innovation partners alongside government, corporate, and consumer-focused collaborators, in a consortium approach to create a mutually beneficial network of self-sovereign identity (SSI) principles with blockchain in Canada. These principles are based on giving users ownership and control over all of their digital identity attributes as an alternative approach to the current status quo of centralized digital identity, which focuses on discrete identities are made within individual online properties. Blockchain is used as the foundation for its strong security protocols to prevent information from being identified, accessed, or misused and uphold SSI principles. This article will consider the current status quo of digital identity known as centralized digital identity and comparisons to the case study’s emphasis on the alternative thinking of SSI with principles with blockchain, which prioritizes a decentralized, self-sovereign, consortium approach as opposed to discrete identities within individual online properties. Each of these principles will be explained in detail before highlighting the practical implications, lessons learned for future applications, and how both the Canadian and global identity landscapes should proceed for wider acceptance of SSI with blockchain. The case study detailed – that of Verified.Me – will demonstrate how blockchain developers can actively work to help partners transition from current identity silos to instead collaborate across varied industries and create a cohesive, secure service and digital identity network that benefits users through SSI principles and the benefits of blockchain. We also offer recommendations for how both the Canadian and global identity landscapes should proceed for wider acceptance of SSI with blockchain, the benefits of doing so, and anticipated barriers affecting the adoption of future decentralized identity initiatives.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbloc.2021.624258/fulldigital identityidentityblockchainself-sovereigndecentralizedidentity verification
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andre Boysen
Andre Boysen
spellingShingle Andre Boysen
Andre Boysen
Decentralized, Self-Sovereign, Consortium: The Future of Digital Identity in Canada
Frontiers in Blockchain
digital identity
identity
blockchain
self-sovereign
decentralized
identity verification
author_facet Andre Boysen
Andre Boysen
author_sort Andre Boysen
title Decentralized, Self-Sovereign, Consortium: The Future of Digital Identity in Canada
title_short Decentralized, Self-Sovereign, Consortium: The Future of Digital Identity in Canada
title_full Decentralized, Self-Sovereign, Consortium: The Future of Digital Identity in Canada
title_fullStr Decentralized, Self-Sovereign, Consortium: The Future of Digital Identity in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Decentralized, Self-Sovereign, Consortium: The Future of Digital Identity in Canada
title_sort decentralized, self-sovereign, consortium: the future of digital identity in canada
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Blockchain
issn 2624-7852
publishDate 2021-04-01
description This article introduces how SecureKey Technologies Inc. (SecureKey) worked with various network participants and innovation partners alongside government, corporate, and consumer-focused collaborators, in a consortium approach to create a mutually beneficial network of self-sovereign identity (SSI) principles with blockchain in Canada. These principles are based on giving users ownership and control over all of their digital identity attributes as an alternative approach to the current status quo of centralized digital identity, which focuses on discrete identities are made within individual online properties. Blockchain is used as the foundation for its strong security protocols to prevent information from being identified, accessed, or misused and uphold SSI principles. This article will consider the current status quo of digital identity known as centralized digital identity and comparisons to the case study’s emphasis on the alternative thinking of SSI with principles with blockchain, which prioritizes a decentralized, self-sovereign, consortium approach as opposed to discrete identities within individual online properties. Each of these principles will be explained in detail before highlighting the practical implications, lessons learned for future applications, and how both the Canadian and global identity landscapes should proceed for wider acceptance of SSI with blockchain. The case study detailed – that of Verified.Me – will demonstrate how blockchain developers can actively work to help partners transition from current identity silos to instead collaborate across varied industries and create a cohesive, secure service and digital identity network that benefits users through SSI principles and the benefits of blockchain. We also offer recommendations for how both the Canadian and global identity landscapes should proceed for wider acceptance of SSI with blockchain, the benefits of doing so, and anticipated barriers affecting the adoption of future decentralized identity initiatives.
topic digital identity
identity
blockchain
self-sovereign
decentralized
identity verification
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbloc.2021.624258/full
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