First, look at what the conventional, top-down notion of identity means. It means someone (the government, generally speaking) must find some way to assign an identity to everyone who needs one, record who those identities have been assigned to, and check that when the identities are presented they are genuine.
It is almost certain that the government is having difficulties establishing who is a genuine citizen purely on the basis of identification papers produced by the existing system. Some of the illegal immigrants caught in the current security swoop have Kenyan ID cards and passports but their details are not in the national database.
It has been claimed that immigration and provincial administration officials at all levels have enriched themselves by selling these sensitive documents while compromising national security.
[From
KENYA: Kenyans to apply for digital identity cards, says Ruto ]
There are problems with this top down approach. Apart from being expensive, it is also vulnerable. One a false identity has been entered into the system, it is no longer false (if you see what I mean). As a consequence, obtaining such an identity becomes an essential precursor to crime as well as legitimate use and therefore the identities are obtained by all sorts of people who are not supposed to have them and the system is subverted. Managing and protecting the database at the heart of this scheme is complicated and difficult. In a great many emerging markets, in particular, the national identity scheme is soon degraded: sometimes because of corruption, sometimes because of carelessness, sometimes because of errors in the concept and design. This is precisely what has happened with the Aadhar scheme in India.
What was supposed to be a unique identification number providing identification and access to a host of government benefits and services, ‘Aadhaar’ has almost unvaryingly been extended to anybody residing within Indian territories. Almost anyone, be it Indian or an illegal immigrant can get an Aadhaar Card made without any proof of identity. More importantly, they get a numbered identity.
[From
Sting reveals Aadhaar documents forged for Nepal, Bangladesh citizens – IBNLive ]
So how does the alternative, crowdsourced version of identity take us forward? Well, if national identity schemes don’t provide “real” security then why bother with them? Save the money. At a basic level crowdsourced identity means asking everyone who you are rather asking anyone (e.g., the government) who you are. Whereas we are used to the idea of identity as something that is granted to us by a third party, such as the government or a bank, and the idea of an identity based on reputation that grows up through our networks and long-term relationships seems rather different.
Compare the two kinds of identity and their functionality in practice. Crowdsourced identity may seem a poor substitute for national identity at first glance, but it seems to me that Kosta is onto something here for two specific reasons that I have touched on before. The first is that this kind of reputational identity is actually
better than conventional national identity because it is much harder to forge or counterfeit. A good friend of mine told me a story about an industry event he attended recently where he ran into a chap late at night when he was going back to his hotel. The guy was in the hotel lobby and recognised my friend as he had been a speaker at the event. The man explained that he had been tricked by a woman in a bar into following her back to hotel room where he had been drugged and robbed. He had no money and was too embarrassed to call his wife and asked if my friend might loan him some money so that he could get home and would report his wallet lost on the train or something. My friend had never met the man before but asked him his name and who he worked for and then looked him up on LinkedIn. Having established that not only did the fellow have a full LinkedIn profile but was actually connected to my friend via several different people, my friend loaned him the money which was, of course, gratefully returned a couple of days later. Now imagine that the unfortunate chap had instead presented my friend with his Portuguese fishing licence: how would my friend evaluate that and assess the strangers plausibility from that official document?
The second reason is that these crowdsourced identities may well be far
cheaper to establish and this is especially true, and especially valuable, in the developing world where official infrastructure may be unreliable at best and non-existent at worst. Here the particular combination of mobile phones and social networks is especially powerful, because mobile phones tend to deliver not only unique identity but transactional history to go with it and this can be linked through social networking in powerful ways. You might have listened to the podcast I recorded earlier this year with Shivani Siroya and and heard a very good example of this where the transactional histories from mobile payment accounts are slurped up by organisations who provide alternatives to conventional kind of credit reference agencies that we are used to in the developed world.
Shivani Siroya is currently the CEO and Founder of InVenture. InVenture facilitates financial access by providing simple mobile accounting and credit scoring tools for offline and unbanked individuals, the subject of this podcast.
[From
Media – Consult Hyperion ]
Taken together, I think these provide compelling support to Kosta’s intuition and it strikes a that, to use Jaron Lanier’s term in “
Who owns the future? ”, the “economic avatars” that arise at the intersection of the mobile phone and the social network may well prove to be more useful to a great majority of the world’s population than their “official” identities even if they have them and indispensable to them if they do not. And, by the way, if you regard the whole idea of giving people credit on the basis of social capital as ridiculous and fanciful, I guess you didn’t see this:
[Bogota] where Lenddo introduced a “social network” Visa card to 100,000 of its customers yesterday afternoon. By 4:00 p.m. today in New York, where the online lender for developing countries is based, more than 1,000 Colombians had applied for the card. Lenddo CEO and co-founder Jeff Stewart calls it the first time ever, anywhere, that approval for a credit card is based on applicants’ reputations on Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, and Twitter.
[From
This Emerging Markets Credit Card Is Backed by Facebook Friends » Techonomy ]
Identity is the new money, as they say. Well,
as I say .