Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by Almondsetat 324 days ago
Your public, verifiable identity already exists because the government keeps track of it. Why would a third party need to be involved if the infrastructure is already available straight from the source? Also, if multiple providers existed, how could platforms avoid duplicates, in case of need?
2 comments

You talk like we all live under the same government, and like it would be a good thing if we did.
This is your own, personal, twisted interpretation of my reply
I don't see how we can arrive at an alternative interpretation if we follow your argument to its logical conclusion.
If you don't see it then that's your problem
Not all countries have centralized systems with comprehensive national databases, some purposefully fragment record-keeping across different agencies and limit their access accordingly.

Privacy laws and constitutional protections vary widely across democracies and - in my estimation - for very good reason.

This is about pure and simple national ID. National IDs are already managed at the national level, by definition. Other kinds of records are outside of the topic
I don't want government to be able to get my id. Especially the British and German governments have proved that their lack the maturity to work with such data. They couldn't even keep their fingers from Corona app data.

I would even prefer it to give my info to Elon Musk. He may be crazy, but he wouldn't be interested in my stupid opinions.