What intrigued me was that Asgardia is a new platform. Open to a variety of things, including technological innovation during its birth and growth. One would have to ask: What can we do to evolve ID, IP, and even voting.
I would have to imply that we ...
What intrigued me was that Asgardia is a new platform. Open to a variety of things, including technological innovation during its birth and growth. One would have to ask: What can we do to evolve ID, IP, and even voting.
I would have to imply that we have two near-perfect solutions for this as they become more of a reality during the 2020s:
1. Blockchains
2. Quantum encryprtions [photonic chips]
What would the two solve if implemented?
1. With blockchain and smart contracts [like you see with ETH Dapps], you solve all the known problems seen in a bureaucratic government. Everything moves quick and you gain all the dreams current governments wish they had: efficiency and automation.
2. Should you focus on photonic/quantum encryption, you have complete security. The hacking entity would have to move faster than the speed of light to simply intervene, but will be detectable and easily averted from.
With this in mind, within minutes or hours you solve a ton of issues that would take governments years to achieve.
An even better solution that's yet to exist but I think will someday: quantum blockchains. But that's only speculation. What's mentioned above already exists and are being perfected as we speak.
The system is designed to prevent and be assigned physically like getting a driver's license. But unlike normal IDs, you actually have extreme protection. More than any government has ever achieved. It speaks levels more than what we have currently.
So, if I'm understanding correctly, your system will handle IDs once they''ll be into Asgardia's DBs, but they can't prevent me to register 2, 3, ..., 50.000 fake ones, right?
Researchers are working on it as we speak, as stated earlier. However, if you are talking about something right now and in the basics and early days of experimentation: I'd go check out https://onename.com/ or similar to see a practical example of blockchain identification.
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Researchers are working on it as we speak, as stated earlier. However, if you are talking about something right now and in the basics and early days of experimentation: I'd go check out https://onename.com/ or similar to see a practical example of blockchain identification.
However, if you wish to know how you can prevent a system from realizing you are John Smith and not John Doe, I bet there'd be a more in-person process made by Asgardia directly as they assign IDs. What I'm talking about is the backend, inner workings of it all.