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self sovereign identity

Daniel Hardman edited this page Aug 15, 2022 · 1 revision

Definition

Self-Sovereign Identity (SSI) is a term that has many different interpretations, and that we use to refer to concepts/ideas, architectures, processes and technologies that aim to support (autonomous) parties as they negotiate and execute electronic transactions with one another.

The dialogue about what Self-Sovereign Identity (SSI) really is — started in the blog "The Path to Self-Sovereign Identity" by Christopher Allen in 2016 — has not resulted in a consensus today. While some see the ten principles of SSI that Allen proposed as the definition of SSI, he formulated them as "a departure point to provoke a discussion about what's truly important". And it is obvious that what is important differs per party.

The perspective that the eSSIF-Lab framework takes is that of supporting (autonomous) parties as they negotiate and execute electronic (business) transactions with one another. So anything that helps - e.g. concepts/ideas, architectures, processes and technologies, will be covered by that term.

Purpose

The purpose of having the term Self-Sovereign Identity (SSI) is that it is an easy way to indicate what is within and what is outside the scope of the eSSIF-Lab framework. Anything in scope is covered by this term, and everything else is not.

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