RWoT8 DID Specification Refinement

Paper Lead: Manu Sporny

Team (in alphabetical order): Dan Burnett, Ken Ebert, Amy Guy, Drummond Reed, Manu Sporny

2019-03-01

https://tinyurl.com/rwot8did

Abstract

The Decentralized Identifier (DID) specification describes a new type of URL that is globally unique, highly available, and cryptographically verifiable and which has no central authority. The DID spec document describes the expected ecosystem, data model, and syntaxes for DIDs. In December 2018, the W3C held a Strong Authentication and Identity Workshop that determined that a reasonable next step would be to create a W3C Working Group to standardize the DID specification. As a result, the W3C Credentials Community Group, which has been incubating the specification, will eventually need to hand the specification over to the newly formed W3C DID Working Group. In preparation for this hand off, a group at Rebooting the Web of Trust triaged issues related to the DID specification, refined existing proposals related to the specification, and gathered new features and requirements from the community. The result of this work is outlined in this document.

Introduction

In a recently published W3C Workshop Report on Strong Authentication and Identity, it was suggested that the DID Specification should be considered for standardization at the W3C via a new group called the W3C Decentralized Identifier Working Group (DID WG). The current Decentralized Identifier Specification maintains a list of issues that have been growing over the past year. Amy Guy and Dmitri Zagidulin performed an initial triage of the DID specification issues as an advanced reading topic paper for Rebooting the Web of Trust 8 (RWoT8).

In an attempt to provide the DID WG with a good foundation to build upon, the W3C Credentials Community Group, with aid from the Rebooting the Web of Trust community, worked on the specification at the Rebooting the Web of Trust 8 (RWoT8) event in Barcelona, Spain in early March 2019. The group processed issues related to the DID specification, refined existing proposals related to the specification, and gathered new features and requirements from the community. The state of the work as of the end of the RWoT8 event is outlined below.

The first day consisted of triaging issues that resulted in three broad categories:

  1. Issues that are editorial and did not require debate.
  2. Current features that required debate and refinement.
  3. New features and requirements that needed to be captured.

The second day consisted of communicating open questions and answering them so that the group could divide the work up into different work tracks that could progress independently. The third day consisted of executing on the work tracks and making as much progress as we could.

The group had wanted to produce a document to detail a plan for the W3C Credentials Community Group to summarize discussion or propose one or more PRs that add the feature to the specification

Issue Triage

One of the results of the issue triage was the desire to restructure the specification in order to communicate the concepts in the document more cleanly. The following structure was agreed upon by the group as an improvement that would need to be further refined:

The result of the issue triage follow. Issue numbers with strike-throughs were resolved during the event.

Feature Refinement

New Features and Requirements

The following new features and requirements were identified at RWoT8

Michael Herman's Key Feedback

Editorial work - WIP: https://github.com/w3c-ccg/did-spec/commits/rwot8-editorial