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Decentralized Identity Explained

You're reading from   Decentralized Identity Explained Embrace decentralization for a more secure and empowering digital experience

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804617632
Length 392 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Rohan Pinto Rohan Pinto
Author Profile Icon Rohan Pinto
Rohan Pinto
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 - Digital Identity Era: Then
2. Chapter 1: The History of Digital Identity FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Identity Management Versus Access Management 4. Part 2 - Digital Identity Era: Now
5. Chapter 3: IAM Best Practices 6. Chapter 4: Trust Anchors/Sources of Truth and Their Importance 7. Chapter 5: Historical Source of Authority 8. Chapter 6: The Relationship between Trust and Risk 9. Chapter 7: Informed Consent and Why It Matters 10. Chapter 8: IAM – the Security Perspective 11. Part 3 - Digital Identity Era: The Near Future
12. Chapter 9: Self-Sovereign Identity 13. Chapter 10: Privacy by Design in the SSI Space 14. Chapter 11: Relationship between DIDs and SSI 15. Chapter 12: Protocols and Standards – DID Standards 16. Chapter 13: DID Authentication 17. Chapter 14: Identity Verification 18. Part 4 - Digital Identity Era: A Probabilistic Future
19. Chapter 15: Biometrics Security in Distributed Identity Management 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Risks arising from compromised identity

When an online identity is compromised, it causes actual harm. While internet services spend a lot of money to make their systems safe, compromising the identity procedures has an impact on the entire system. One prominent example is the banking industry, which is an appealing target since a breach might allow an attacker to steal cash. Losing the keys to systems that secure sensitive information, such as medical data, can have serious ramifications for users:

Figure 6.1 – Compromised identity risks

Figure 6.1 – Compromised identity risks

The issue with the web’s trust source and identity procedures is that credentials act as keys to all the values stored in the systems. A social security number, for example, can be a unique identifier for all US citizens, but it is also widely used as a validation secret, something that only the user knows and can thus be used to authenticate their identities. Furthermore, dangers exist across the systems...

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