Sovereign identity has been a hot topic in blockchain and cryptocurrency, especially with the rise of the creator economy. Currently, there are two types of digital identities— federated and centralized whereby data is in the control of the service provider. Self-sovereign digital identity is often cited as a human right that can reclaim agency using blockchain technology, but what frameworks exist that aid in governing it?
On Aug. 2, NFT Steez, a bi-weekly Twitter Spaces hosted by Alyssa Expósito and Ray Salmond, met Marjorie Hernandez, the co-founder of LUKSO and The Dematerialized to discuss the state of blockchain-based identities and “Universal Profiles.” According to Hernandez, in the future, “everything will have a digital identity.”
Onboarding into the digital realm should be frictionless for sovereign “Universal Profiles”
During the interview, Hernandez explained the paradigm shift between centralized platforms to a more “platform-less future” and she stressed that users need to be in control of their identities and in control of their creation on more “agnostic platforms,” where users can take own their intellectual property via “Universal Profiles.”
Lukso’s integration of Universal Profiles enables users and creators to reclaim their identities and issue their IP in a symbiotic manner between creator and user. According to Hernandez, the Universal Profile can be seen as a personal operating system (OS) whereby one can authenticate themselves, but also send, receive and create assets.
As Hernandez puts it, Universal Profiles are a “Swiss Army type tool that is serving so many purposes for the user.”
Related: Web3 is crucial for data sovereignty in the metaverse
Blockchain-based identities in Web3
Understably, the emphasis of identity within Web3 began to spark up again when 2D profile pic (PFP) NFTs began to emerge. This surge was framed as a means to represent and identity oneself and also a flex, or expression of ego. For some, their physical and social identities were traded for their newly adopted digital avatar.
However, Hernandez argues that while some perceive digital oftentimes as masking one’s true self, and believes that in a “decentralized digital environment,” people will be emboldened “to move beyond these predispositions” and express what she would consider to be one’s “true real self.”
The basis of Hernandez’ thesis is simply because blockchain-based identity not only is…
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