Illinois Tests A Blockchain-Based Birth Registry/ID System (illinoisblockchain.tech)
An anonymous reader quotes Government Technology:
The state of Illinois, which has six blockchain pilots underway, will partner with Utah-based Evernym for a birth registry pilot meant to individualize and secure identities... The endeavor, one of six distinct blockchain explorations Illinois began last summer with a working group, is expected to utilize the Sovrin Foundation's publicly available distributed identity ledger and expand upon accomplishments of the W3C Verifiable Claims Task Force, the state said... Recognizing that identity -- and, now, digital identity -- begin at birth, the state will explore using these technologies to create "a secure 'self-sovereign' identity for Illinois citizens during the birth registration process," it said in the announcement.
More from the Illinois Blockchain Initiative site: Self-sovereign identity refers to a digital identity that remains entirely under the individual's control. A self-sovereign identity can be efficiently and securely validated by entities who require it, free from reliance on a centralized repository. Jennifer O'Rourke, Blockchain Business Liaison for the Illinois Blockchain Initiative commented, "To structurally address the many issues surrounding digital identity, we felt it was important to develop a framework that examines identity from its inception at child birth... Identity is not only foundational to nearly every government service, but is the basis for trust and legitimacy in the public sector."
In the proposed framework, government agencies will verify birth registration information and then cryptographically sign identity attributes such as legal name, date of birth, sex or blood type, creating what are called "verifiable claims" or attributes. Permission to view or share each of these government-verified claims is stored on the tamper-proof distributed ledger protocol in the form of a decentralized identifier... This minimizes the need for entities to establish, maintain and rely upon their own proprietary databases of identity information.
Evernym's "Chief Trust Officer" sees the program as "a major contribution to the larger effort of solving the online identity problem."
More from the Illinois Blockchain Initiative site: Self-sovereign identity refers to a digital identity that remains entirely under the individual's control. A self-sovereign identity can be efficiently and securely validated by entities who require it, free from reliance on a centralized repository. Jennifer O'Rourke, Blockchain Business Liaison for the Illinois Blockchain Initiative commented, "To structurally address the many issues surrounding digital identity, we felt it was important to develop a framework that examines identity from its inception at child birth... Identity is not only foundational to nearly every government service, but is the basis for trust and legitimacy in the public sector."
In the proposed framework, government agencies will verify birth registration information and then cryptographically sign identity attributes such as legal name, date of birth, sex or blood type, creating what are called "verifiable claims" or attributes. Permission to view or share each of these government-verified claims is stored on the tamper-proof distributed ledger protocol in the form of a decentralized identifier... This minimizes the need for entities to establish, maintain and rely upon their own proprietary databases of identity information.
Evernym's "Chief Trust Officer" sees the program as "a major contribution to the larger effort of solving the online identity problem."
Isn't blockchain mostly for transactions that will never be modified/reversed or are single well-defined actions at a point in time, like transfers of money or sales?
Information about people is complex. What if something about the birth record changes or needs to be corrected?
We already know the saying, databases are real easy to create, impossible to correct. What do you expect the ability of a government agency to properly administer some new technology like this will be?
Is this really needed?
All the blockchain ideas are incredibly stupid. It's like a law of nature. Just take any idea, add "blockchain", "sovereign", "decentralized" and it becomes instantly trendy.
No, blockchain won't help you to establish your identity. It's your private key that you use to sign blockchain updates that establishes it. And if your key is stolen then it's game over for you - somebody ELSE will be owning your identity. Forever. With no recourse for you.
All realistic proposals (including the one in TFA) include key revocation protocols through some kind of central authority (i.e. government), at which point the whole system becomes indistinguishable from a simple centralized database.
You know, the one using the letters G, A, T, and C.
(I think I saw a movie that did this ... and nothing went wrong.)
It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
Isn't blockchain mostly for transactions that will never be modified/reversed or are single well-defined actions at a point in time, like transfers of money or sales?
And in the same vein of "Why?" :
- The whole purpose of blockchain is to have NO central authority, but a distributed public trust.
(customer A gives money to company B and no central authority is needed to confirm it, as long as both A and B use the bitcoin protocol)
- The whole point of a Birth registry is TO HAVE a central authority.
(in case of doubt, check the *official* birth certificate with authority XyZ)
So it seems even weirder to me. it doesn't seem very useful.
Information about people is complex. What if something about the birth record changes or needs to be corrected?
In theory you could still add "amend" records updating the database in the blockchain.
(Just like the "well-defined actions at a point in time transfers of money" can be followed by subsequent further "transfers of money" - e.g.: spending money previously received).
In practice that is going to be problematic, because some of this information is personnal - I would guess sex changes, in some jurisdiction : the person doesn't necessarily want that the history of past sex identities to be publicly known.
In a blockchain technological implementation, all the history NEEDS to be available for the public consensus mecanism to work.
In a authority clasiccal implementation, the authority might only provide the latest official version publicly and keep the access to the history restricted to the person (and medical personnel)
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
There is no online identity problem, just a couple of power-hungry fascists who can't grasp the idea of anonymity or why it's essential to the internet. Without anonymity, you have no internet, just another government-approved propaganda outlet like TV.
And with anonymity, you give the impression you are either insufficiently invested, or too afraid, to have your opinions associated with an identity. And what makes you think you can't have government-approved propaganda WITH anonymity?
Hmm... last time I checked the side of The Party pushing for national ID was the democrats and the republican side was strictly opposing it.
Did something change since the prez election?
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
Actually it's unlikely to happen anytime soon. Why? Because it would be INCREDIBLY profitable if you could do it. You think there aren't already thousands of highly trained and motivated security gurus working day and night trying to crack that? If you can do that, all of the bitcoins in the world could be yours!
This is how you find a secure technology for your application. Find one where cracking it would be insanely profitable and such a hack would instantly be noticed. If it's still secure after a few years, it probably is.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
There are other systems besides proof of work (mining) which aren't so intensive. Proof of stake and proof of Authority don't require mining. I don't know enough about them to go over the pros and cons, but proof of stake is suitable for use on mobile phones. There are block chain voting initiatives using it.
And because it will take an increasing amount of sex to mine each new baby, the population of Illinois will be algorithmically limited. Budget problem solved!
Did something change since the prez election?
Everything changes after presidential elections; good becomes bad and bad becomes good, depending on your pov. You must be new here.
Isn't blockchain mostly for transactions that will never be modified/reversed or are single well-defined actions at a point in time, like transfers of money or sales?
I think a birth fits that definition rather well.
- The whole purpose of blockchain is to have NO central authority, but a distributed public trust. - The whole point of a Birth registry is TO HAVE a central authority.
No, the purpose is to be able to verify data. Centralization or the lack thereof is a side effect - possibly a useful one but a side effect all the same. There is no inherent reason a birth registry has to be centralized. It just has been because it was was the most expedient and reliable process at the time to do so at the time most birth registries were developed. If anything it would be more useful to have a decentralized registry of such public records if it could be done safely and reliably because it become more robust if you have multiple copies. I have family that had critical master copies of documents (birth certificates and military records) lost in fires because they were centrally stored with inadequate backups.
Now whether a blockchain is a good use for this specific problem is something I haven't given serious thought to but it's an interesting question. I've said for a long time that Bitcoin is an idiotic implementation of a currency by people who generally value ideology over evidence in economics. But the blockchain technology it relies upon is actually really promising for a wide variety of practical applications and is probably the most valuable thing about bitcoin.
"If lots of people are working on something and it isn't done yet, it must be impossible."
And that's why SHA-1 is still considered completely secure? I mean, it was introduced in 1995 and nobody had found a weakness in it by 2004. 9 years without being cracked clearly means it's unbreakable, right?
And distributed blockchain has been around since 2008. 9 years without being cracked. Clearly it will never be cracked, right?
That isn't blockchain, it's simply a really long serial number...
There is no online identity problem,
Yes there is. I used to work for a state govt agency and fake Identities and the associated fraud were a huge problem costing taxpayers millions a year. A Blockchain solution can eliminate this if done properly.
... Someone will get ahold of the state's key and suddenly millions of Guatemalans will be us citizens born in Illinois and eligible to vote.
Thats the exact thing which would be very very hard to forge even for someone with write access, because they would have to insert those birth records at the right point in the timeline of the chain and then recalculate the resulting hash from every db transaction after that, and then get a bunch of other independent chain operators to all agree that all those entries being inserted now, from 20-50 years ago are legitimate.
Wow, what an incredibly boring application.
Who is going to validate the block chain? What is their incentive? How are we going to trust it any better than we currently trust the state department of records? What exactly are we gaining by this?
Here is how we do it in Belgium
1) When you are born or when you become an official person you get a National ID. This is your date of birth, an increasing number and a control number.
That is you. However that number is NOT to identify you. It is to be used AFTER identification. If this would somehow be broken for whatever reason, you can get a new one.
2) You get an ID. Since forever when you are 12. This ID is used to well, ID you. There is a number of the ID. You can verify if an ID is valid or not on https://www.checkdoc.be/ If it is stolen or lost you call it in and it will be blocked right away. You will have to go to the police for a temp one if they stop you (e.g. when you where speeding) and you can not do anything where you would need an ID, like take a loan. You will have to get a new ID. That take up to 2 weeks.
The data on the chip can be read via open source https://eid.belgium.be/en Source is available for also Linux, so you can read the code.
That ID is to, well, ID you.
The downside is that you can not block what can be read. That means that if it is read, they can read your address and age. So they could spam you. As long as you not put it in every reader you see, scamming is a lot harder (never impossible)
The thing is that the ID is not unique. You need to replace it every 5 years. It can be lost or stolen. The fact that that is possible is a GOOD thing, because that means the procedure is in place that theft is an option. Having something in place that can not be (easily) changed is the issue.
Companies, once they have identified you, will use the National Number. But only after identification. At that moment it becomes easier to use. However when identification is needed (e.g. if you want to increase your credit limit) you will need your ID again to identify you.
So US, it is open source, use it as you please.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
Why? Mormons are obsessed about lineage. Lineage is a big deal in their dogma.
But how does that 'corrupt' this technology? People who are automobile enthusiasts often are involved with developing new automotive technology. People who are bicycle enthusiasts often are involved with developing new bike technology. This is nothing different.
Are you trying to stir up anti-Mormon sentiments? Is that the thrust of your comment? Because people do that to be anti-Muslim or anti-semetic, too.
No longer have to rely on The State to believe who the list of people is. I think that is huge.
Take off every 'sig' !!