93a0cc89d2
This reverts commit 10f438dd4a
.
293 lines
15 KiB
Markdown
293 lines
15 KiB
Markdown
---
|
|
title: Rethinking Identity
|
|
description: >-
|
|
A more useful way of thinking about identity on the internet, and using that
|
|
to build a service which makes our online life better.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
In my view, the major social media platforms (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram,
|
|
etc...) are broken. They worked well at small scales, but billions of people are
|
|
now exposed to them, and [Murphy's Law][murphy] has come into effect. The weak
|
|
points in the platforms have been found and exploited, to the point where
|
|
they're barely usable for interacting with anyone you don't already know in
|
|
person.
|
|
|
|
[murphy]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murphy%27s_law
|
|
|
|
On the other hand, social media, at its core, is a powerful tool that humans
|
|
have developed, and it's not one to be thrown away lightly (if it can be thrown
|
|
away at all). It's worthwhile to try and fix it. So that's what this post is
|
|
about.
|
|
|
|
A lot of moaning and groaning has already been done on how social media is toxic
|
|
for the average person. But the average person isn't doing anything more than
|
|
receiving and reacting to their environment. If that environment is toxic, the
|
|
person in it becomes so as well. It's certainly possible to filter the toxicity
|
|
out, and use a platform to your own benefit, but that takes work on the user's
|
|
part. It would be nice to think that people will do more than follow the path of
|
|
least resistance, but at scale that's simply not how reality is, and people
|
|
shouldn't be expected to do that work.
|
|
|
|
To identify what has become toxic about the platforms, first we need to identify
|
|
what a non-toxic platform would look like.
|
|
|
|
The ideal definition for social media is to give people a place to socialize
|
|
with friends, family, and the rest of the world. Defining "socialize" is tricky,
|
|
and probably an exercise only a socially awkward person who doesn't do enough
|
|
socializing would undertake. "Expressing one's feelings, knowledge, and
|
|
experiences to other people, and receiving theirs in turn" feels like a good
|
|
approximation. A platform where true socializing was the only activity would be
|
|
ideal.
|
|
|
|
Here are some trends on our social media which have nothing to do with
|
|
socializing: artificially boosted follower numbers on Instagram to obtain
|
|
product sponsors, shills in Reddit comments boosting a product or company,
|
|
russian trolls on Twitter spreading propaganda, trolls everywhere being dicks
|
|
and switching IPs when they get banned, and [that basketball president whose
|
|
wife used burner Twitter accounts to trash talk players][president].
|
|
|
|
[president]: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/07/sports/bryan-colangelo-sixers-wife.html
|
|
|
|
These are all examples of how anonymity can be abused on social media. I want
|
|
to say up front that I'm _not_ against anonymity on the internet, and that I
|
|
think we can have our cake and eat it too. But we _should_ acknowledge the
|
|
direct and indirect problems anonymity causes. We can't trust that anyone on
|
|
social media is being honest about who they are and what their motivation is.
|
|
This problem extends outside of social media too, to Amazon product reviews (and
|
|
basically any other review system), online polls and raffles, multiplayer games,
|
|
and surely many other other cases.
|
|
|
|
## Identity
|
|
|
|
To fix social media, and other large swaths of the internet, we need to rethink
|
|
identity. This process started for me a long time ago, when I watched [this TED
|
|
talk][identity], which discusses ways in which we misunderstand identity.
|
|
Crucially, David Birch points out that identity is not a name, it's more
|
|
fundamental than that.
|
|
|
|
[identity]: https://www.ted.com/talks/david_birch_identity_without_a_name
|
|
|
|
In the context of online platforms, where a user creates an account which
|
|
identifies them in some way, identity breaks down into 3 distinct problems
|
|
which are often conflated:
|
|
|
|
* Authentication: Is this identity owned by this person?
|
|
* Differentiation: Is this identity unique to this person?
|
|
* Authorization: Is this identity allowed to do X?
|
|
|
|
For internet platform developers, authentication has been given the full focus.
|
|
Blog posts, articles, guides, and services abound which deal with properly
|
|
hashing and checking passwords, two factor authentication, proper account
|
|
recovery procedure, etc... While authentication is not a 100% solved problem,
|
|
it's had the most work done on it, and the problems which this post deals with
|
|
are not affected by it.
|
|
|
|
The problem which should instead be focused on is differentiation.
|
|
|
|
## Differentiation
|
|
|
|
I want to make very clear, once more, that I am _not_ in favor of de-anonymizing
|
|
the web, and doing so is not what I'm proposing.
|
|
|
|
Differentiation is without a doubt the most difficult identity problem to solve.
|
|
It's not even clear that it's solvable offline. Take this situation: you are in
|
|
a room, and you are told that one person is going to walk in, then leave, then
|
|
another person will do the same. These two persons may or may not be the same
|
|
person. You're allowed to do anything you like to each person (with their
|
|
consent) in order to determine if they are the same person or not.
|
|
|
|
For the vast, vast majority of cases you can simply look with your eyeballs and
|
|
see if they are different people. But this will not work 100% of the time.
|
|
Identical twins are an obvious example of two persons looking like one, but a
|
|
malicious actor with a disguise might be one person posing as two. Biometrics
|
|
like fingerprints, iris scanning, and DNA testing fail for many reasons (the
|
|
identical twin case being one). You could attempt to give the first a unique
|
|
marking on their skin, but who's to say they don't have a solvent, which can
|
|
clean that marking off, waiting right outside the door?
|
|
|
|
The solutions and refutations can continue on pedantically for some time, but
|
|
the point is that there is likely not a 100% solution, and even the 90%
|
|
solutions require significant investment. Differentiation is a hard problem,
|
|
which most developers don't want to solve. Most are fine with surrogates like
|
|
checking that an email or phone number is unique to the platform, but these
|
|
aren't enough to stop a dedicated individual or organization.
|
|
|
|
### Roll Your Own Differentiation
|
|
|
|
If a platform wants to roll their own solution to the differentiation problem, a
|
|
proper solution, it might look something like this:
|
|
|
|
* Submit an image of your passport, or other government issued ID. This would
|
|
have to be checked against the appropriate government agency to ensure the
|
|
ID is legitimate.
|
|
|
|
* Submit an image of your face, alongside a written note containing a code given
|
|
by the platform. Software to detect manipulated images would need to be
|
|
employed, as well as reverse image searching to ensure the image isn't being
|
|
reused.
|
|
|
|
* Once completed, all data needs to be hashed/fingerprinted and then destroyed,
|
|
so sensitive data isn't sitting around on servers, but can still be checked
|
|
against future users signing up for the platform.
|
|
|
|
* A dedicated support team would be needed to handle edge-cases and mistakes.
|
|
|
|
None of these is trivial, nor would I trust an up-and-coming platform which is
|
|
being bootstrapped out of a basement to implement any of them correctly.
|
|
Additionally, going through with this process would be a _giant_ point of
|
|
friction for a user creating a new account; they likely would go use a different
|
|
platform instead, which didn't have all this nonsense required.
|
|
|
|
### Differentiation as a Service
|
|
|
|
This is the crux of this post.
|
|
|
|
Instead of each platform rolling their own differentiation, what if there was a
|
|
service for it. Users would still have to go through the hassle described above,
|
|
but only once forever, and on a more trustable site. Then platforms, no matter
|
|
what stage of development they're at, could use that service to ensure that
|
|
their community of users is free from the problems of fake accounts and trolls.
|
|
|
|
This is what the service would look like:
|
|
|
|
* A user would have to, at some point, have gone through the steps above to
|
|
create an account on the differentiation-as-a-service (DaaS) platform. This
|
|
account would have the normal authentication mechanisms that most platforms
|
|
do (password, two-factor, etc...).
|
|
|
|
* When creating an account on a new platform, the user would login to their DaaS
|
|
account (similar to the common "login with Google/Facebook/Twitter" buttons).
|
|
|
|
* The DaaS then returns an opaque token, an effectively random string which
|
|
uniquely identifies that user, to the platform. The platform can then check in
|
|
its own user database for any other users using that token, and know if the
|
|
user already has an account. All of this happens without any identifying
|
|
information being passed to the platform.
|
|
|
|
Similar to how many sites outsource to Cloudflare to handle DDoS protection,
|
|
which is better handled en masse by people familiar with the problem, the DaaS
|
|
allows for outsourcing the problem of differentiation. Users are more likely to
|
|
trust an established DaaS service than a random website they're signing up for.
|
|
And signing up for a DaaS is a one-time event, so if enough platforms are using
|
|
the DaaS it could become worthwhile for them to do so.
|
|
|
|
Finally, since the DaaS also handles authentication, a platform could outsource
|
|
that aspect of identity management to it as well. This is optional for the
|
|
platform, but for smaller platforms which are just starting up it might be
|
|
worthwhile to save that development time.
|
|
|
|
### Traits of a Successful DaaS
|
|
|
|
It's possible for me to imagine a world where use of DaaS' is common, but
|
|
bridging the gap between that world and this one is not as obvious. Still, I
|
|
think it's necessary if the internet is to ever evolve passed being, primarily,
|
|
a home for trolls. There are a number of traits of an up-and-coming DaaS which
|
|
would aid it in being accepted by the internet:
|
|
|
|
* **Patience**: there is a critical mass of users and platforms using DaaS'
|
|
where it becomes more advantageous for platforms to use the DaaS than not.
|
|
Until then, the DaaS and platforms using it need to take deliberate but small
|
|
steps. For example: making DaaS usage optional for platform users, and giving
|
|
their accounts special marks to indicate they're "authentic" (like Twitter's
|
|
blue checkmark); giving those users' activity higher weight in algorithms;
|
|
allowing others to filter out activity of non-"authentic" users; etc... These
|
|
are all preliminary steps which can be taken which encourage but don't require
|
|
platform users to use a DaaS.
|
|
|
|
* **User-friendly**: most likely the platforms using a DaaS are what are going
|
|
to be paying the bills. A successful DaaS will need to remember that, no
|
|
matter where the money comes from, if the users aren't happy they'll stop
|
|
using the DaaS, and platforms will be forced to switch to a different one or
|
|
stop using them altogether. User-friendliness means more than a nice
|
|
interface; it means actually caring for the users' interests, taking their
|
|
privacy and security seriously, and in all other aspects being on their side.
|
|
In that same vein, competition is important, and so...
|
|
|
|
* **No country/government affiliation**: If the DaaS was to be run by a
|
|
government agency it would have no incentive to provide a good user
|
|
experience, since the users aren't paying the bills (they might not even be in
|
|
that country). A DaaS shouldn't be exclusive to any one government or country
|
|
anyway. Perhaps it starts out that way, to get off the ground, but ultimately
|
|
the internet is a global institution, and is healthiest when it's connecting
|
|
individuals _around the world_. A successful DaaS will reach beyond borders
|
|
and try to connect everyone.
|
|
|
|
Obviously actually starting a DaaS would be a huge undertaking, and would
|
|
require proper management and good developers and all that, but such things
|
|
apply to most services.
|
|
|
|
## Authorization
|
|
|
|
The final aspect of identity management, which I haven't talked about yet, is
|
|
authorization. This aspect deals with what a particular identity is allowed to
|
|
do. For example, is an identity allowed to claim they have a particular name, or
|
|
are from a particular place, or are of a particular age? Other things like
|
|
administration and moderation privileges also fall under authorization, but they
|
|
are generally defined and managed within a platform.
|
|
|
|
A DaaS has the potential to help with authorization as well, though with a giant
|
|
caveat. If a DaaS were to not fingerprint and destroy the user's data, like
|
|
their name and birthday and whatnot, but instead store them, then the following
|
|
use-case could also be implemented:
|
|
|
|
* A platform wants to know if a user is above a certain age, let's say. It asks
|
|
the DaaS for that information.
|
|
|
|
* The DaaS asks the user, OAuth style, whether the user is ok with giving the
|
|
platform that information.
|
|
|
|
* If so, the platform is given that information.
|
|
|
|
This is a tricky situation. It adds a lot of liablity for the user, since their
|
|
raw data will be stored with the DaaS, ripe for hacking. It also places a lot of
|
|
trust with the DaaS to be responsible with users' data and not go giving it out
|
|
willy-nilly to others, and instead to only give out the bare-minimum that the
|
|
user allows. Since the user is not the DaaS' direct customer, this might be too
|
|
much to ask. Nevertheless, it's a use-case which is worth thinking about.
|
|
|
|
## Dapps
|
|
|
|
The idea of decentralized applications, or dapps, has begun to gain traction.
|
|
While not mainstream yet, I think they have potential, and it's necessary to
|
|
discuss how a DaaS would operate in a world where the internet is no longer
|
|
hosted in central datacenters.
|
|
|
|
Consider an Ethereum-based dapp. If a user were to register one ethereum address
|
|
(which are really public keys) with their DaaS account, the following use-case
|
|
could be implemented:
|
|
|
|
* A charity dapp has an ethereum contract, which receives a call from an
|
|
ethereum address asking for money. The dapp wants to ensure every person it
|
|
sends money to hasn't received any that day.
|
|
|
|
* The DaaS has a separate ethereum contract it manages, where it stores all
|
|
addresses which have been registered to a user. There is no need to keep any
|
|
other user information in the contract.
|
|
|
|
* The charity dapp's contract calls the DaaS' contract, asking it if the address
|
|
is one of its addresses. If so, and if the charity contract hasn't given to
|
|
that address yet today, it can send money to that address.
|
|
|
|
There would perhaps need to be some mechanism by which a user could change their
|
|
address, which would be complex since that address might be in use by a dapp
|
|
already, but it's likely a solvable problem.
|
|
|
|
A charity dapp is a bit of a silly example; ideally with a charity dapp there'd
|
|
also be some mechanism to ensure a person actually _needs_ the money. But
|
|
there's other dapp ideas which would become feasible, due to the inability of a
|
|
person to impersonate many people, if DaaS use becomes normal.
|
|
|
|
## Why Did I Write This?
|
|
|
|
Perhaps you've gotten this far and are asking: "Clearly you've thought about
|
|
this a lot, why don't you make this yourself and make some phat stacks of cash
|
|
with a startup?" The answer is that this project would need to be started and
|
|
run by serious people, who can be dedicated and thorough and responsible. I'm
|
|
not sure I'm one of those people; I get distracted easily. But I would like to
|
|
see this idea tried, and so I've written this up thinking maybe someone else
|
|
would take the reins.
|
|
|
|
I'm not asking for equity or anything, if you want to try; it's a free idea for
|
|
the taking. But if it turns out to be a bazillion dollar Good Idea™, I won't say
|
|
no to a donation...
|