Digital identity just got a mainstream push. A major tech giant rolled out a secure way to store and present IDs directly through their mobile wallet app. This move could normalize digital credentials for everyday use — think airport security, age verification, or government services without fumbling for physical cards. While not blockchain-native, it signals growing acceptance of digitized identity solutions. The real question: will centralized systems like this pave the way for decentralized identity protocols, or crowd them out before they gain traction?
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ZKProofster
· 11-16 03:04
*sigh* another centralized "solution" that totally misses the point of cryptographic privacy
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HallucinationGrower
· 11-15 23:01
Centralized is back!
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MetaverseHomeless
· 11-15 11:10
Another trap that allows big companies to monitor in different ways.
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AirDropMissed
· 11-14 03:28
Manually change identification ya香
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bridge_anxiety
· 11-13 04:19
To put it bluntly, it's just Be Played for Suckers again.
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JustHereForMemes
· 11-13 04:18
fr tho this centralized stuff is mid af
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NonFungibleDegen
· 11-13 04:08
bullish on web3 id but ser this is too much centralized cope ngl
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LiquidityWitch
· 11-13 04:05
What does this have to do with centralization? Let it be whatever it wants.
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0xInsomnia
· 11-13 04:01
Big Brother is watching you
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DaoTherapy
· 11-13 03:57
The tech giants want to frame my identification information again.
Digital identity just got a mainstream push. A major tech giant rolled out a secure way to store and present IDs directly through their mobile wallet app. This move could normalize digital credentials for everyday use — think airport security, age verification, or government services without fumbling for physical cards. While not blockchain-native, it signals growing acceptance of digitized identity solutions. The real question: will centralized systems like this pave the way for decentralized identity protocols, or crowd them out before they gain traction?