Okay, sure, let's do this. "nomadic identity" 1. No one has ever even come close to explaining how using a did: uri is supposed to work2. Even assuming it works, no one can explain how it's different than oidc3. Even assuming it was different, what hap...
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@tess I mean, sort of. The whole nomadic identity concept is connected to a real problem. In the fediverse, we call it admin drama. All these servers are someone's little hill, of which they are the little king. The only real choice most people have is to choose their king, and there's basically no information to go on when making that choice.
But nomadic id is not an actual solution to that problem
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to Jenniferplusplus on last edited by
@tess but it feels like a solution. And it's easier than the actual solution, which is to do the real work of governance. Although it would help a lot if we could build told that make governance easier instead of harder. Or more approachable instead of more elite. But that's a somewhat different topic.
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@jenniferplusplus I have a lot of ideas on this that solve a good portion of the problems.
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@dalias ideas to make dns a workable identity registry?
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@jenniferplusplus One choice among others, and in a way that doesn't require perpetual maintenance of it.
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Yeah, but users are absofuckinglutely TERRIBLE at keeping track of their own keys. The number of my users who have lost/broken their phones/hardware tokens, or wiped and sold them without migrating their keys first is Way too damn high, even among some very smart R&D engineers who really REALLY ought to know better...
@hrefna
@jenniferplusplus @ariadne -
That's why I mentioned controlled (or managed) keys rather than provided keys, specifically.
You can have a third party or system with key access (CMEK/KMS-style), you can allow revocation and blind replacement so long as you don't require key possession for login, you can use a third party to verify it (VC-style or keybase style), etc.
It just depends on what you are aiming for and what the consequences are of it going sideways.
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smallcircles (Humanity Now 🕊)replied to Hrefna (DHC) on last edited by
Great thread. Your mention of Keybase made me forward this discussion to the @keyoxide matrix chatroom.
Keyoxide
Modern and secure platform to manage a decentralized identity based on cryptographic keys
(keyoxide.org)
(Note: Years ago I mused a bit about use cases for Keyoxide on the fedi and created this issue https://codeberg.org/keyoxide/keyoxide-web/issues/105 )
@JessTheUnstill @jenniferplusplus @ariadne -
smallcircles (Humanity Now 🕊)replied to smallcircles (Humanity Now 🕊) on last edited by
@hrefna @keyoxide @JessTheUnstill @jenniferplusplus @ariadne
I cross-referenced this discussion on SocialHub in Nomadic Identity topic:
Nomadic identity for the fediverse?
hey all, was wondering, is anyone still actively working on #nomadicidentity for the fediverse? My interest in nomadic identity is somewhat inspired by scuttlebutt: to allow for migrating an account between servers, wit…
SocialHub (socialhub.activitypub.rocks)
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smallcircles (Humanity Now 🕊)replied to Irenes (many) on last edited by
Yeah, it's sad. Couple years ago I found this early draft spec about did:orb by a - unknown to me - club called Trustbloc. Focused on fedi, and not crypto-shenanigan-related afaics. I added the spec to delightful-activitypub-development curated list.
But I am not following this club and looking in the GH repo just now, I think we have a PoWaste going on. The spec is also related to a "Sidetree protocol" now (Not gonna check out more atm).
GitHub - trustbloc/orb: A DID method implementation that extends the Sidetree protocol into a Fediverse of interconnected nodes and witnessed using certificate transparency. Spec: https://trustbloc.github.io/did-method-orb/
A DID method implementation that extends the Sidetree protocol into a Fediverse of interconnected nodes and witnessed using certificate transparency. Spec: https://trustbloc.github.io/did-method-orb/ - trustbloc/orb
GitHub (github.com)
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Mike Macgirvin 🖥️replied to Jenniferplusplus on last edited bya did:uri is a string that represents you. It is not tied to DNS, so it can represent you at any server. Now the truth is the web is DNS based so we have to resolve it to a location to find you. This requires a DNS operation of some kind. But the location is not actually you. It's just where you're hanging out today. You can move. Your id is the same.
OIDC is an authentication and authorisation framework. DID is just an identity. Proving it's your identity requires you to sign something.
Finding the responsible adult you mention is just a slightly different algorithm. You can forget about the location. It is only relevant for knowing somewhere to look for the identity. But you're looking for the identity. In practice this means you won't have just 'user' storage. You'll have user (identity) storage and location storage, and it isn't necessarily a 1:1 mapping. You can have several locations for a given identity. For traditional fediverse accounts, there will be a 1:1 mapping.
If you want to block a person, blocking locations isn't going to cut it. You will need to block the identity.
That's the short and sweet. -
Mike Macgirvin 🖥️replied to Mike Macgirvin 🖥️ on last edited byOh, and the did resolver algorithm we're going to be using with ActivityPub does not rely on proof of waste technology. It uses ed25519 keys and a lookup on participating servers at a .well-known endpoint. That's it.
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Ariadne Conill 🐰:therian:replied to Jess👾 on last edited by
@JessTheUnstill @hrefna @jenniferplusplus this is why i’ve always proposed a form of encrypted key escrow instead. you store the key(s) on the server as an encrypted blob and then decrypt it on the device when you need it.
problem is, we can talk about steps to mitigate shitty admins who want to do performative power plays, but those same admins like the status quo because they benefit from the power imbalance and user lock-in. you won’t sell the empire builders on tools which make keeping the empire going more difficult.
this is why every time i get interested in this space again i conclude that we would basically have to start over from scratch to build a more fair social networking system.
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to Mike Macgirvin 🖥️ on last edited by
@mikedev A very quick scan of the dashboard says that Fedidb is aware of at least 23,000 fediverse servers. The current location for a DID could be any of those. You're going to poll the entire fediverse to find where to send messages?
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Jess👾replied to Ariadne Conill 🐰:therian: on last edited by
For a lot of admins/mods, the sense of power and control over others is the currency they require to do the work of maintaining their instances. A whole part of the draw for building and maintaining a community is to have the power over your little fiefdom.
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@JessTheUnstill
I try to extend a little more grace than that. I'm sure there's a contingent of admins who just wanted to provide a service for people, and they get pushed into this defensive and controlling stance by the lack of tools and support. -
Mike Macgirvin 🖥️replied to Jenniferplusplus on last edited byAll Mastodon is going to see is a resolvable URL that returns an actor record. Just like they see today. The URL is probably going to look a bit strange -- but if you fetch it, it will behave like any fediverse actor id.
It will have some properties which might be of interest to you if you wish to support nomadic identity. If you don't, you may go about your life and have your entire online existence tied to a temporary rental name just like you do now. -
Jenniferplusplusreplied to Mike Macgirvin 🖥️ on last edited by
@mikedev OK? Except I'm asking for someone to show me how to draw the rest of the owl. This kind of hand-wavy don't-worry-about-it response is extremely unhelpful.
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Vasya Sovarireplied to Jenniferplusplus on last edited by
@jenniferplusplus is it bad that I have exactly zero clue what any of this means? If so, scale 1-10
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to Vasya Sovari on last edited by
@VasyaSovari No, I think it means you've made better life choices than I did