| ▲ | stateofinquiry an hour ago | |||||||
Thank you for sharing this. I understand, and even agree, that how this is being handled has some pretty creepy aspects. But one thing missing from the comments I see here and elsewhere is: How else should verification be handled? We have a real problem with AI/bots online these days, trust will be at a premium. How can we try to assure it? I can think of one way: Everyone must pay to be a member (there will still be fraud, but it will cost!). How else can we verify with a better set of tradeoffs? There is some info from Persona CEO on (of course) LinkedIn, in response to a post from security researcher Brian Krebs: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/bkrebs_if-you-are-thinking-ab... . I note he's not verified, but he does pay for the service. | ||||||||
| ▲ | throwaway063_1 38 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> How else should verification be handled? Many European countries have secure electronic identifications that are trusted by the government, banks etc. Linkedin could easily use this to verify the identities. Examplse of services where you can verify the identity in 35 different providers with a single API: https://www.signicat.com/products/identity-proofing/eid-hub or https://www.scrive.com/products/eid-hub I doubt it would take more than a sprint to integrate with this or other services. | ||||||||
| ▲ | anttihaapala an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
How about everyone gets a digital certification from their own government that this is the person named this and that. No need to share cranial measurements and iris scans. | ||||||||
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