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Jochen Weber's avatar

I am curious about your opinions on whether or not people benefit from a trustworthy identity certification authority (that is, a mechanism that would allow citizens to show one another some thing, could be a series of numbers that encode both a biometric aspect like a photo, together with a cryptographic signature of authenticity that can be independently verified) that makes them believe the person in front of them is who they say they are?

One of the ills of our time is that trust (or faith) in one another is dwindling precariously. I am not entirely sure how the citizenry got out of this rut in past moments of the country, and don’t think “IDs” will be a means to get out of it, but I do believe that they provide a floor, a basis on which people are still willing to engage with strangers they have otherwise no reason to trust. You show me your ID, and if I think it is legit, and I cannot find any “bad stuff” associated with your ID (name plus date of birth), I am willing to engage in business.

My preference would be an identity certification organization outside the government (maybe something the AAA could offer for members, as a service, but making it clear that this is NOT meant to become the next SSN replacement, used for tracking of credit or the like, and that anyone using it that way will be sued, maybe the certificate could use something patentable, and anyone copying the mechanism would suffer a patent infringement violation lawsuit…?)

In any case, I do not see America returning to a state where strangers have a strong reason to trust one another “on sight” — partly because of the reasons the right sees for asking for ID for voting: with longstanding unfettered immigration in our recent past, it is hard to say who is here “to stay” (have skin in the game), and who is here “transitionally.”

Maybe I am not long enough in the country (legally immigrated here in 2008, and didn’t follow civic politics closely enough) to know — but my *intuition* of how citizens feel about one another is that the expectation of fraud committed by a random stranger has dramatically increased, somewhere from low single-digits to maybe somewhere in the mid-teens to mid-twenties (in percentage points), so maybe 1/30 to 1/5. It’s how people feel about one another.

When came here and rented my first sublet room, the guy I rented it from in Harlem was an attorney and all he wanted to see was a letter from someone with a printed address that matched my (German) ID’s name. Since he wasn’t an expert in German IDs, that could have been a fake, and the letter I produced could have been fake as well. Happier times… but even he wanted something that carried the same name as a piece of plastic I had back then. It’s not an unreasonable requirement… today, he likely would want to see soooo much more, and have a way of verifying that the letter is genuine as well.

Daniel Anderson's avatar

The bullet list may not have been exhaustive, but it certainly was exhausting to read 😆

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