Blockchain and Digital Identity
Technological advancements in the
digital space has revolutionized every aspect of our lives, from shopping to
collaborating with colleagues to keeping in touch with friends to entertainment
to managing our finances. Since the
dawn of the Internet, identity management has been a key concern, with billions
of dollars being spent on usability, security and privacy.
The identity and access management
market is expected to grow from $8.09 billion in 2016 to $14.82 billion by
2021, representing a 12.9% CAGR. Despite this huge investment, managing digital
identities continues to be plagued by three Cs – Cumbersome, Costly and
Challenging.
With data driving the world today,
digital identity is critical to most business and social transactions. This
governs the interaction of users in the digital world. But traditional identity
systems continue to be highly vulnerable, with single points of failure,
attracting continuous attempts to gain access to the complete repository of
high value data.
And, with companies prioritizing cybersecurity,
identity protection and compliance management, while customer experience is
significantly compromised. As individuals, we shoulder the burden of managing
multiple online IDs and passwords, while also handling a host of documents,
including passports, driver’s licenses, Social Security cards and medical
insurance cards.
Blockchain has evolved
significantly from the distributed ledger technology created to track bitcoin
ownership. This technology can replace traditional systems with a highly
trusted mechanism of managing identities. Blockchain can empower users to have
greater control over their own identity. Organizations can use the information
only with customers’ consent and no central entity would be able to compromise
a consumer’s identity.
Blockchain has facilitated the
so-called self-sovereign identity, which is inherently unalterable and more
secure than traditional identity systems.
This has the potential to
completely change the way we use identities to connect to different online
services. Individuals would use their self-sovereign ID to verify their
identity, removing the need for passwords. As with every lifechanging
innovation, there’s been an extended period of evolution, with experts
exchanging ideas and little consensus on what self-sovereign ID means!
It’s a concept that stems from the
belief that an individual must have control over the administration of his
identity. The ID cannot be locked into one site and there needs to be
interoperability of the ID across multiple platforms, with user consent. Experts
have been contemplating the summation of various identifying information like
demographic and employment related data and even information about the
individual revealed by other people.

 
 
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