
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
We use our identity each day, and often more times than we realize. We use our identity to shop online, submit tax returns and even logon for a day’s work. Each of these require a separate identity and the need to remember passwords, and a separate registration process.
What if we could merge these and have a shared ID instead of having different credentials? The good news is that blockchain has enabled a new way to solve this problem through constructs like verifiable credentials (VCs) and the ability to orchestrate identity verification across the network. In this episode, David Chan, Ernst & Young LLP, speaks with Ankur Patel, Microsoft – Identity Products Lead and Rob Foster, Ernst & Young LLP, about how DIDs (decentralized identities) can improve the user experience and streamline identity management processes.
5
1313 ratings
We use our identity each day, and often more times than we realize. We use our identity to shop online, submit tax returns and even logon for a day’s work. Each of these require a separate identity and the need to remember passwords, and a separate registration process.
What if we could merge these and have a shared ID instead of having different credentials? The good news is that blockchain has enabled a new way to solve this problem through constructs like verifiable credentials (VCs) and the ability to orchestrate identity verification across the network. In this episode, David Chan, Ernst & Young LLP, speaks with Ankur Patel, Microsoft – Identity Products Lead and Rob Foster, Ernst & Young LLP, about how DIDs (decentralized identities) can improve the user experience and streamline identity management processes.