DIDs Are Cool. We Didn't Need Them(inamoon.com)
inamoon.com
DIDs Are Cool. We Didn't Need Them
https://www.inamoon.com/blog/dids-vs-subjects
9 comments
DIDs are the new NFTs: crypto enthusiasts desperately trying to find an excuse for why their blockchains are needed in the wider world.
The name "Decentralized Identifiers" tells you everything you need to know. It's just blockchain. DID backends include ION/Sidetree, Indy, and Ethr using BitCoin, Hyperledger, and Ethereum respectively.
The name "Decentralized Identifiers" tells you everything you need to know. It's just blockchain. DID backends include ION/Sidetree, Indy, and Ethr using BitCoin, Hyperledger, and Ethereum respectively.
I mean isn't this just a side effect of DIDs coming out a time when a lot of activity happened with blockchains? They came from w3c, a web org.
I guess my experience is similar to what you're saying though: we didn't really need that crypto layer to immediately gain value. But the way it compressed ids into a single namespace, that was useful.
I guess my experience is similar to what you're saying though: we didn't really need that crypto layer to immediately gain value. But the way it compressed ids into a single namespace, that was useful.
Isn’t the whole point of DIDs that you can switch platforms without your DID changing?
Is this AI writing? Maybe from an outline prompt? I can’t tell
We’re screwed
We’re screwed
Nope, not an outline prompt. Just my early morning jumble. (We still might be screwed, but I like to think not!)
I didn't think so, but LLM's have taken so many tropes of a certain style of writing: the bullet points, the contradiction to make a point (not this...but that...) that when I see that style, I automatically question it
But you made actual clear points, so it didn't really feel like it, but honestly I can't be sure anymore!
But you made actual clear points, so it didn't really feel like it, but honestly I can't be sure anymore!
One of the benefits of a DID-like is that it can be parsed. Lots of folks have probably seen the DOI, a pointer to a specific publication. Here are two that folks might not know:
• The ORCID (https://info.orcid.org/researchers/), a unique ID for researchers, and a place for researchers to provide information about themselves, their affiliated institutions, and their publications.
• The RRID (https://rrid.site), a unique ID for research materials & tools. You can identify a specific antibody, or a specific DNA sequencer, or a particular HPC platform.
These are all centralized repositories of things (researchers, plasmids, instruments, …), all with the purpose of making it easier to identify, find, and connect things.