One of the crypto industryâs biggest players is experimenting with ways to give its users more control of their personal information.
Crypto exchange turned corporate unicorn Coinbase has a 17-person team currently exploring decentralized identity solutions. B Byrne, the product manager of Coinbaseâs identity team, told CoinDesk he wants to âhelp people own more of who they are online.â
Revealed exclusively to CoinDesk, Byrneâs approach relies on creating bridges between Coinbase products, such as its mobile wallet, with a built-in decentralized application (dapp) explorer. He explained:
âIâm looking at dapps, and which of our customers are using which dapps. Thatâs probably a good indicator of what types of activities [our customers] want to be doing in an on-chain way.â
In Byrneâs mind, the best way to start lies in identifying a small segment of Coinbase users who would gain real value from controlling more of their personal data, rather than Coinbase repeatedly collecting and storing their know-your-customer (KYC) information across the platformâs products.
Over the next 12 months, Byrne said his team aims to scale these experiments from just a few users to a âmeaningful groupâ of dapp users. In addition to tech-savvy power users, Byrne said identity solutions could have the most immediate impact for customers that âarenât getting access to things because itâs too hard as is.â
Byrne added:
âWe think itâs an important part of our future and weâre thinking about the tools we need to ship for that.â
As such, Byrne said his team is talking with projects like the W3C Credentials Community Group. W3C member and crypto veteran Christopher Allen told CoinDesk the group aims to launch a Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) Working Group in January that can recommend standards through the Massachusetts-based World Wide Web Consortium.
Although Allen is urging companies like Coinbase to take a more active role in these standards-building efforts â arguing that at least 5 percent of a tech corporationâs budget should be devoted to community contributions â Byrne said Coinbase is hesitant because such efforts are still too academic and might distract from the daily priorities of serving customers.
Indeed, Coinbaseâs VP of corporate and business development, Emilie Choi, told CoinDesk there arenât plans so far to delegate a portion of the $300 million Series E that Coinbase raised in October to the identities team or related community projects â aside from perhaps hiring at least three more digital identity experts.
Joseph Weinberg, chairman of the data network Shyft, told CoinDesk that the whole industry needs to âfigure out and formalize better waysâ to standardize development models related to digital identities. Shyft is already working with government entities in Bermuda and Mauritius to test data-sharing and privacy technologies.
âYou need to also focus on the governance part [of development] because these are systems that people work with,â Weinberg said. âThatâs the problem that weâre not so good at in our space.â
By starting with a few Coinbase Wallet users, Byrneâs team hopes to find niche groups that could benefit from partially decentralized identity solutions in specific, regulator-friendly contexts. The operative word here is âpartially.â
âWe want to protect [Coinbase] users and make sure itâs really safe,â Byrne said. âI spend time thinking about the Social Security Administration or the DMV [Department of Motor Vehicles], because they are the purveyors of so much identity today.â
Based on his own experiences building international and compliant privacy solutions, Shyftâs Weinberg told CoinDesk he doesnât think decentralized identity solutions will ever allow crypto exchange users to control all their own data.
Regardless, Weinberg said companies can cooperate to give users the right to choose how data sharing happens. He added:
âI have no problem paying for a service where I know how [identity data] is being used.â
When it comes to building such systems, Allen, the W3C co-founder, emphasized the importance of distinguishing authentication â âthe relationship between the digital data and a real personâ â from authorization â âthe ability to do different types of things,â such as buying securities.
Coinbaseâs Byrne generally agreed with this distinction, adding âat this point, it doesnât feel like thereâs a clear standard that weâve agreed on that solves a problem.â He said it would be a steep commitment for Coinbase to be involved with each group that is currently working on its own identity standards.
However, in Weinbergâs mind, collaboration could actually make it easier for companies to expand services across jurisdictions, which is a priority for Coinbase.
For example, if the crypto exchange Kraken was already operating in one Caribbean country, then if companies like Coinbase entered the region they could simply query the international ID network for overlapping data instead of on-boarding users all over again.
Even if Byrneâs team develops identity solutions that reduce cross-platform friction or increase customersâ privacy, these solutions will probably rely on public tools and protocols that exist beyond Coinbase.
âItâs not a zero sum game at this point,â Byrne said. âWhatever standards we agree on, upkeep will be critical.â
To underscore this same point, Allen mentioned the infamous Heartbleed vulnerability that impacted several types of open-source software in 2014. That ripple effect across the tech industry started because just one person was updating the OpenSSL code years after its initial creation. A critical bug eventually crept in.
âI donât want to see that problem replicated in the bitcoin world,â Allen said. âI would like it for customers to say: I donât want to hire a qualified custodian unless youâre contributing to the commons.â
Plus, Allen said, official working groups like the one that his W3C community project aims to become, can create international standards that are referenced as an authority by regulators and technologists alike.
Without commenting on any specific resources or priorities, Byrne agreed Coinbase would need to commit to keeping the infrastructure for future solutions âhealthy.â Byrne also expressed curiosity about how Coinbase could someday take a more active role in community efforts.
âA failure mode of past identity thinking has been trying to win it and own everybodyâs identity completely as opposed to working in standardized ways that decentralize and distribute out that power,â Byrne said, adding:
âEverybody is still just getting started.â
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