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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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 work
2. Even assuming it works, no one can explain how it's different than oidc
3. Even assuming it was different, what happens when I need to find a responsible adult to come collect an asshole in my mentions? -
mx alex tax1a - 2020 (4)replied to Jenniferplusplus on last edited by
@jenniferplusplus the base DID spec was made by some cryptocurrency company, for 'distributed ledger' purposes, so, that kinda says it all to us
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to mx alex tax1a - 2020 (4) on last edited by
@atax1a yeah, and that 100% tracks. The missing assumption behind all of this is that there would be something like a universal public blockchain that functions as a registry.
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Ariadne Conill 🐰:therian:replied to Jenniferplusplus on last edited by
@jenniferplusplus did uris don’t work for anything
anyway, the AP take on it (largely pushed by me) is as:alsoKnownAs. the idea was that these weak AP actors could be configured in such a way that they map back to a larger person (as the sum of all the actors). this enables a few useful things, such as automatic relaying/archival of content you posted elsewhere. that might be useful for many reasons, but the big one is that your relationship with a specific instance may change at any time (either due to the instance going out of service, or the instance banning you, the specific reason doesn’t matter so much).
another proposed use was to allow different accounts by the same person to declare they were related to each other (for example: a user might have a casual shitposting account and a more professional tech account).
as far as moderation, it does not really raise any new concerns. a troll can create accounts on other instances and abuse them already. in fact it likely helps with moderation, because you could say, limit other actors mentioned in as:alsoKnownAs based on reciprocal relationships.
as for OIDC, the OpenWebAuth work by Mike MacGirvin in Hubzilla/Zot/Zot6/whatever he is calling his projects this week, is largely unrelated to nomadic identity. it’s just a scheme where URLs have a signed proof of identity attached to them, thus allowing a somewhat transparent form of portable single sign-on across Hubzilla instances. this is not needed or required in AP, and frankly I think it doesn’t fit into the AP model we have landed on.
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Ariadne Conill 🐰:therian:replied to Ariadne Conill 🐰:therian: on last edited by
there is a longer discussion to be had about the political implications of nomadic identity, but suffice it to say the large question is “why should i have to trust my admin?”
and, well, my answer to that question is — ideally not. i have spent 20 years doing trust and safety work in OSS community spaces. the reality is that power structures where there is no accountability for an admin frequently get abused to suit the whims of that admin.
as i explained to andrew lee, before he decided to go run freenode into the ground, a freenode staff member had the authority to destroy the careers of people they found undesirable, with no due process. this isn’t something we should want for the fediverse.
the fundamental power imbalance is visible in the fediverse on a daily basis, both in terms of actual incidents, but also in terms of how larger instances get a larger pass because they are “too big to fail.”
the answer given is “move to a different instance with different governance,” which is a fine enough answer if moving were lossless and low cost. making that the reality is the goal of nomadic identity as pertaining to the fediverse.
right now, users are effectively locked into all decisions made by their admin, because if an admin decides to say, defederate an instance and they disagree with that decision, the relationships were already severed and the user has to go manually repair them from her new account.
in a nomadic world, i would have mirrored my account and preferences to other instances in advance, and when my preferred instance changes, the relationships were already mirrored ahead of time, thus protecting me against admins who make decisions that would otherwise negatively impact my use of the fediverse.
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Irenes (many)replied to Jenniferplusplus on last edited by
@jenniferplusplus we have read the DID spec (and related specs), mostly because we wanted to be able to speak to it
the short answer is that it is a framework for companies operating proof-of-waste systems to make money by selling your "decentralized" account to you
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@jenniferplusplus reading the specs makes it very clear that that's the only use-case anyone cares about. there are a couple fig leaves suggesting that there might be non-anarcho-capitalist ways to use it someday, but none of those are actually specced out.
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Ariadne Conill 🐰:therian:replied to Ariadne Conill 🐰:therian: on last edited by
these days however i am not really sold on what we presently have being an ideal solution.
my take on an ideal solution is more one of a “controlled identity,” where i publish some .well-known URI on my domain which maps to a set of inboxes and outboxes. users can then poll those inboxes and outboxes for interactions.
this would be a better approach than anything the nomadic folks are doing, as it enables a user to have full control over what data is where. that is something where the bluesky folks could have really won over AP, but sadly they are worrying more about their fake DID URIs instead
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to Ariadne Conill 🐰:therian: on last edited by
@ariadne see, these are real valid concerns and actual implemetable solutions. Compared to the libertarian fantasy land that is every explanation of nomadic/distributed/sovereign identity.
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to Jenniferplusplus on last edited by
@ariadne fwiw, these are also concerns that I share. I think there's also an easy intermediate step, which is to allow for user provided private keys. That gives a lot of extra weight to the aka relation, and it allows people to manage a credible exit from their home server that doesn't depend on the home server's cooperation.
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Hrefna (DHC)replied to Jenniferplusplus on last edited by
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Hrefna (DHC)replied to Jenniferplusplus on last edited by
@jenniferplusplus Every time I read anything on DID it seems to quickly devolve into ranting about ICANN and I just give up. If it's not in the spec it is in every doc that connects to the spec in any meaningful way. -.-
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to Jenniferplusplus on last edited by [email protected]
P.S. any identity solution that requires everyone to maintain their own individual domain name and dns records is a terrible idea that cannot work in practice. Not strictly the same thing as DID, I know. But it's always the very next thing that comes up.
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@jenniferplusplus any solution that doesn't require being part of a community is only going to appeal to the most paranoid and/or antisocial people.
"Oh no what if my admin blocks a domain I have followers on?"
Perhaps you should have read the about page of your server and realized it wasn't going to be friendly to the kinds of people who follow you?
Sometimes you do have a shit admin or shit governance. If you're paying attention, you'll usually notice it long before it's actually a problem.
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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