- The Social Security Scam
- Reputation versus Identity
- Multiple Personalities
- Fluidity of Identity
Fluidity of Identity
The Internet has shown time and time again that reputations are important, but don’t have to be tied to specific real individuals. The entire banking system is built on top of the idea of reputation, but tries hard to tie them to real identities.
The problem of identity theft is likely to break this connection. We will see a greater disconnect between individuals and their reputations.
Corporations already do this with different branding for different market segments, and it’s only a matter of time before the facilities become more widely available.
The designers of the Secure Internet Live Chat (SILC) protocol realized this some years ago. SILC does not provide a mechanism for tying an online personality to a real person (although you can do this out of band).
Instead, it provides something more valuable; a way of telling whether a particular online identity corresponds to the same person today as it did yesterday. This is valuable in an online chat setting, because the only contact you are likely to have with a particular person in an Internet chat room is via that chat room. The reputation is based entirely on their behavior in that context.
The same is true in many other contexts; the behavior of individuals in a specific context is important and their actions in others are misleading.