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this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2023
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Asklemmy
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The auth system knows you verified for something. The only way to actually preserve privacy is total anonymity to everyone.
Nope, it doesn't. Did you read what I wrote or did you just have a knee-jerk reaction?
What good is it for the system to know, if the system disregards that information right after auth? Effectively it's like no one ever knew.
Hence why such a system would need to be open source and publicly audited.
It is a basic tautological fact that you cannot verify an identity while keeping that identity private from the verifier.
Then you don't know much about IT. Sure, the verifier must know your identity at the point of identification. Doesn't mean it has to store any information about what you did. Unless of course you're worried that the PC itself will magically come to life and do something with the information. In that case you need an entirely different kind of help. Source for my claims: Designing system architecture is literally my job.
No verifier can ever be trusted. The only way to have privacy is anonymity.