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Hameed Ansari
Hameed Ansari

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Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) and Why Digital Identity Needs a Rethink

Most identity systems on the internet are centralized by design. Emails, OAuth logins, identity providers, and even government-backed digital IDs all depend on central authorities.

That model keeps failing.

Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) propose a different approach: identity that is created, owned, and controlled by the user, verified through cryptography instead of platforms.

A DID resolves to a DID Document containing public keys and verification methods. This allows third parties to verify identity without storing user data or contacting a central server.

Some practical implications:

  • No passwords to steal

  • Reduced attack surface

  • Portable identity across apps

  • Better privacy guarantees

DIDs are already being explored in:

  • Passwordless authentication

  • Financial identity verification

  • Healthcare data sharing

  • Web3 and decentralized apps

I wrote a detailed, beginner-friendly explanation covering:

  • How DIDs work

  • Why centralized identity is failing

  • Real-world use cases

  • Current limitations

Full article here:
👉 https://techputs.com/decentralized-identifiers-dids/

If you’re building systems that care about privacy, security, and user ownership, decentralized identity is worth understanding now, not later.

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