Verifiable Credentials Technology

The Rise of Verifiable Credentials Technology

The Rise of Verifiable Credentials Technology

The concepts of verifiable credentials and self-sovereign identity have been shrouded in mystery and potential complication for end-users trying to sort out what it actually is, how to tell when it’s not, and more importantly, which vendor they should trust (and why) when an individual first discovers these concepts.

Verifiable credentials and self-sovereign identity aren’t new concepts. For example, Evernym did a great job in this blog post at explaining what self-sovereign identity (underpinned by verifiable credentials technology) actually is, how businesses can easily use it, and what it means in terms of security, in a “explain it to me like I’m five” kind of way.

When done in a privacy-preserving way (no personal information is ever logged onto a ledger, even in hashed form, unless you want it to be), this technology fundamentally shifts everything in the way we make statements or claims about ourselves or other people, organizations, or things. To top it all off? It’s possible for the end-user to choose which piece (or combination of pieces) of information to share, with who, and under what restrictions, and without having to have those same pieces of information stored in some central database somewhere.

It’s the stuff that makes privacy experts and GDPR enthusiasts involuntarily drool.

I’m excited to see that the technology is more openly and now rapidly, touching other industries. The original technology is first and foremost about identity attributes as verifiable credentials, but for me it goes far beyond that.

To me, that’s just where the possibilities begin.

Any Kind of Credential, not just Identity

The technology already stands and is built-in for almost any type of credential you want to verify.

The ability now exists to provide hard, nearly tamper-proof ways of being able to prove statements made by you or someone else. This, right here, is the backbone and in my opinion, the key to solving the issues of trust between individuals, companies, governments, and other entities.

You can combine your credentials (claims you make about yourself), just like you do now with paper credentials, to prove certain statements you make, but in a privacy-preserving and much more secure and trustworthy way. You can now verify the source of the information, along with the information itself.

In other words, you can make statements about yourself, your situation, your background, or your experiences, and have it verified in a matter of seconds (for shorter claims) and maybe minutes for much longer ones.

This leads to deep and wide, life-changing use cases, across several industries.

What would it be like?

  • What would it be like for Recruiters to be able to instantly verify job or salary history prior to submitting candidates for open positions?
  • What would it be like for a mortgage company to be able to verify all of the information entered on the documents prior to submitting the documents to underwriting? Could there be some cost savings involved?
  • What would it be like for landlords to be able to nearly instantly verify a potential tenant’s residential history while screening their applicants?
  • What would it be like for insurance companies to be able to know the facts of a situation while processing a claim, for all parties involved? Could investigations become shorter and claims processed faster? Could there be less litigation involved? Could this make prosecuting fraud more effective?
  • What would it be like for health care providers and patients, alike, to be able to verify the credentials of their doctors, nearly instantly, and on demand, regardless of the type or specialty?
  • What would it be like if someone could know, nearly instantly, the true and correct source(s) of the information they’re reading, regardless of the platform or publisher the end-user is getting it from?
  • What would it be like for the court systems if the credentials of every single officer of the court (including the local sheriff) could be validated on the spot, prior to trusting personal information to them? Could the damage caused by those who are illegally posing as officers of the court be stopped before it begins?
  • What would it be like for people dealing with multiple government agencies across state lines? Would people still have to call a DMV in one state for them to fax paperwork to some obscure office of another state’s DMV just to clear up some administrative paperwork delay? Or could they now just present the credentials: their fine has been paid, hold’s have been released, or that yes, their CDL credentials and endorsements are legit, and the person standing at the counter could simply see that what they’re saying is true without waiting?
  • What about the undocumented refugees in other countries? What would it mean for them, to be able to prove their identity, their original home country, or their birth dates, when all of their documents were destroyed in war?
  • What about people who find themselves caught up in the world of human trafficking? Being able to prove who they are, even though their identifying documents have been taken from them, is sometimes the key to rescue.

These, my friend, are just the very tippy top (just a shaving really) of a much larger and extraordinarily beautiful iceberg.

After my exposure to this technology, I began to see how this technology could directly affect the legal, law enforcement, and forensics industries.

Anything you say, can, and will be held against you.

If you’ve ever dealt with law enforcement, any kind of matters dealing with the courts, or have been involved in any kind of investigation, you know firsthand about:

  • the invasive questions,
  • the waiting,
  • the lies that may be told by opposing individuals,
  • and the time, mess, and the mental and financial drain involved in just having facts being admitted, heard, and or upheld by the those in authority.

Instead:

  • What would it be like if an attorney could know, nearly instantly, if most statements made in initial pleadings are true or false, — before they get filed with the court and served on the other party? Could an attorney fight more effectively for their client or maybe avoid time-wasting cases altogether? What would this capability do for due process, discovery, depositions, and expert testimony, and cross-examinations?
  • What would it be like if a potential client is able to instantly verify or nullify the accusations being levied against them, being able to prove to the attorney they’re about to hire — just the essential and ultimate facts, without the background drama?
  • What if the courts and Department of Child Support could verify DNA results to determine parenting before enforcement letters are sent, just because the system told them to? Would this save the administration money and make their enforcement efforts more effective?
  • What if an individual can prove their true identity to the law enforcement officer on the spot, before they’re arrested for looking like someone else, or just happening to have the same name as someone the police are searching for?
  • What would happen in the cases of evidence searches if the chain of evidence could be cryptographically proven without revealing sensitive information about either the accused or the victim?
  • What would happen if the findings of the lab results are verified and logged with this technology? What would happen if attorneys could “search the ledger” to see which credentials have been revoked and why during their cases?

What would all of this mean for justice, criminals, false accusations, and the time it takes to process it all?

Wouldn’t these capabilities change “the game” just a teeny-tiny bit?

Just think about that for a few minutes.

Trust me when I tell you, this goes on and on and on, right down through every process and procedure that currently exists for any industry. Seeing the possibilities that exist for the legal, law enforcement, and forensics industries, is nothing short of exciting.

It’s the stuff that makes ME involuntary drool.

Keeping verifiable credentials technology, with privacy-preserving protocols, privacy-by-design methodologies, zero-knowledge proofs, and rules that state no personal information is ever stored (even in a hashed form) on a ledger is important. I would love to see it eventually adopted into the legal, law enforcement, and forensics industries.

Doing so, isn’t just a passion or a need. It’s helping Lady Justice keep her scales balanced, those with authority accountable, and removing the backlog of administrative delay and error found at every level in almost every process within legal, law enforcement, and forensics.

Verifiable credentials technology preserves truth first, so that law enforcement, officers of the court, their supporting staff, and those involved in investigations can do their jobs far more efficiently.

  • Less mistakes are made.
  • Less sorting of who’s telling the truth and who isn’t happens.
  • Investigations, cases, and all other related matters are wrapped up more quickly and fairly for everyone involved.
  • The financial blow back for administrations, departments, individuals, and families, are inherently reduced.

This technology changes lives for the better across every spectrum, when it comes proving personal identity attributes (like your birth date or eye color), and statements being made for or against a person (like those made on a resume or on pleadings that have been filed with a court). It can save reputations. It releases truth and equity from the bonds and prejudices of who has the most money, who’s in a hurry to clear their docket for the day, or who can verify (or obscure) the truth on paper and to the jury the most. In some cases, it saves lives and rescues others.

The use cases are nearly endless. When you stop to break down processes within processes of everyday work, patterns, and behavior, you start to see how verifiable credentials, done in this privacy-preserving way can, and just may be, the “magic bullet” you’ve been waiting for.

The paradigm shift is here and it’s happening. For more information about this technology, you can contact Evernym at www.evernym.com or Sovrin at www.sorvin.org.

This article was published first at: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/rise-verifiable-credentials-technology-misty-s-bledsoe/ on 8/22/19.

Tippy-toe Verifiable Credentials Technology

Tippy-toe Verifiable Credentials Technology

The application of the technology holds great promise.

You can verify statements that are made on legal docs (or any kind of statements really) in a matter of seconds — before a case is taken by a lawyer, or before the papers are filed with the court.

It upholds the truth behind the claims that are made.

Having that one superpower alone would reduce the bottlenecks found in the court processes, not to mention save everyone on time and money when dealing with legal issues!

To learn more about it, you can see Evernym (the folks who digitized it with privacy-preserving protocols) and Sovrin (who uses it to verify claims you make about your identity).

Evernym has an app called Connect.Me which helps individuals take advantage of the technology. Keep in mind, some features may not work on all phones. Last I checked this was still a work in progress and improvements may have been made since this writing.

There’s technical understanding to be had about this technology, but it’s important to understand that these credentials that prove or disprove what you’re saying or claiming:

  • don’t live in a third-party database somewhere
  • don’t require businesses to completely overhaul how they’re doing things
  • your information is never actually put on a blockchain or a distributed ledger
  • your information is also never referenced by a “hash” on these ledgers

But any business who adopts the technology can “plug into” the ledger and reference information, even though your information is not actually living there.

It’s a pretty sweet set up.

And no, I don’t “get anything” for telling you about verifiable credentials technology. I believe it’s hugely important to start understanding what it actually is before the marketplace gets flooded with buzzwords and incorrect terminology.

Your data and facts, for you or against you, depend on it.

Using Verifiable Credentials Technology Exposes False Police Reports

Using Verifiable Credentials Technology Exposes False Police Reports

The police filed a false report.

The officers, according to the news article, admitted to it.

It happens. Not everywhere. And definitely not by good cops. But it happens. It’s also something we try very hard to not think about. In this case, I’m glad the officers were caught and fessed up.

But that doesn’t always happen.

What happens if you’re the one the report is filed against? Or a loved one? How can a person possibly defend themselves against something like that?

With verifiable credentials technology, statements made on police reports (like many other documents) can be proven truthful, untruthful, or be labeled as “self-attested” prior to being submitted for the record.

This reduces the likelihood that a police report can be falsified to begin with. In turn, this prevents a whole host of other ripple effect actions from taking place, for both an individual and a local police department.

Almost every data point found on a police report has the potential to become a verifiable credential.

Here are just some things that can be proven or disproven through the use of properly instantiated verifiable credentials technology:

  • locations,
  • the time and date of an event,
  • weather conditions,
  • whether or not utilities are turned at a location or not,
  • concealed weapons permits and expiration dates,
  • legal names,
  • driver’s license ID numbers, classifications, issue, and expiration dates,
  • badge numbers,
  • write-ups or other disciplinary actions and their types,
  • list of officers involved in a case,
  • first officer on the scene,
  • the author of the police report,
  • whether or not background checks were done and when,
  • when and where a suspect asked for a lawyer,
  • when and where Miranda rights were read,
  • charges that were levied,

and more.

Once proven, disproven, or left “self-attested”, it helps individuals save time in their defenses by focusing only on facts and information that are already unproven or disputed. It also helps prosecutors to do the same.

How many of the four out of five individuals who cannot afford an attorney would feel relief in knowing there are less facts to dispute when focusing their finances on their defense? What prosecutor wouldn’t love to have a treasure trove of readily proven information at their finger tips?

The capabilities of verifiable credentials technology can make a police officer think twice before falsifying information. Eventually, things will be fact-checked and cross referenced with other verifiable claims and credentials that are either on file or have been newly created.

Depending on what’s already provided in a case, this can happen in literally in a matter of minutes.

Another layer of safety

Using this technology creates another layer of safety for police departments. It allows departments to discover if police reports have been falsified or not – faster and easier, and then makes disciplining offenders faster with potentially harsher consequences.

The entirety of the technology streamlines statements made and while proving or disproving the authenticity of those statements. It also proves the level of trustworthiness of the source of the information, which can be crucial when determining whether not evidence is considered admissible.

  • Funds are no longer wasted in trying to track down the truthfulness of some things, but instead, cases and mysteries are resolved faster.
  • Case loads for both stretched police departments and legal teams will begin to move more swiftly as much of the truth is sorted out upfront.

This is good news for the legal and law enforcement industries.

For the four out of five people who cannot afford an attorney, this helps possibly reduce the costs and pitfalls currently found in typical legal defense fees and or pro se defense methodologies.

This technology, alone, can help police departments and legal professionals leverage their efforts to restore balance and trust between the public and those chosen to protect, serve, and uphold the laws.

Since this technology already exists and is already being used by different industries around the world, I think it’s time for exploration of the use cases that can be had by the legal, law enforcement, and the forensics industries. (There are a lot of them).

If you’re a business of any kind, you can get more information about verifiable credentials technology by seeing it in action at Sovrin.org or by visiting the inventors of the currently approved “creme de la creme” of protocols behind it at Evernym.com. If you want to look at the technology under the hood, there are oodles of slinky, attractive, and engaging whitepapers to read. Individuals can visit an app store to get the Connect.Me app, which has a great in-app tutorial showing you a little bit about how it would work on a personal level.

With this technology, individuals don’t have to worry so much anymore about an officer of the law practicing their creative writing skills on a legal document that can potentially alter the course of the individual’s life or family. Today it’s not only possible to raise the awareness and implementation of the technology, but I’m excited that it’s already starting to happen.