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Digital self-determination is a multidisciplinary concept derived from the legal concept of self-determination and applied to the digital sphere, to address the unique challenges to individual and collective agency and autonomy arising with increasing digitalization of many aspects of society and daily life.
Relationship between entities, identities and attributes / identifiers Decentralized identifiers (DIDs) [1] can be used to enable self-sovereign identities.. Self-sovereign identity (SSI) is an approach to digital identity that gives individuals control over the information they use to prove who they are to websites, services, and applications across the web.
The blended mask perspective is likened to the concept of 'blended identity', [11] whereby the offline-self informs the creation of a new online-self, which in turn informs the offline-self through further interaction with those the individual first met online. It means people's self-identity varies in different social or cultural contexts.
What makes these agents effective is us: our unique data, prompts, and personalities that create a “digital self” that advises and acts on behalf of you, its human counterpart. AI agents ...
Content warning: this article discusses self-harm, ableism, racism, and eating disorders, which could be triggering for some readers. Last year I was looking for medical advice online, which most ...
A digital identity may also be referred to as a digital subject or digital entity. They are the digital representation of a set of claims made by one party about itself or another person, group, thing, or concept. A digital twin [5] which is also commonly known as a data double or virtual twin is a secondary version of the original user's data ...
Sherry Turkle (born June 18, 1948) is an American sociologist. She is the Abby Rockefeller Mauzé Professor of the Social Studies of Science and Technology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
RFC 5280 defines self-signed certificates as "self-issued certificates where the digital signature may be verified by the public key bound into the certificate" [7] whereas a self-issued certificate is a certificate "in which the issuer and subject are the same entity". While in the strict sense the RFC makes this definition only for CA ...