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I was initially pretty hyped when I read the abstract for DIDs, bookmarked the spec and read it later. The "spec" is a bunch of buzzwords and vague generic "concepts". The DIDs themselves mean basically nothing, it's the "methods" that actually must have their own specification and actually "do something". Another feeling you can quickly get from DIDs is that they're blockchain centric. The entire concept is "jack of all trades, master of none". I actually hope to be wrong, and see some more fully fledged implementations/examples of real world use-cases, because I love the idea of federated/decentralized identity. |