Governance Framework Demand Curve
Discussion
- Drummond Reed : Although, the concept of 'acceptance networks' comes from the payment industry and it applies to acceptance or verification of payment cards, it has parallels to verification of credentials. In both cases, whether payment cards or verifiable credentials, a risk assessment is made. The verifiers are the risk owners and they need an acceptance network but this is actually the governance framework.
- Scott Perry : in the payment model they have the risk mitigation for acceptance or non-acceptance of payment charges and they have a mechanism to say who ultimately pays, similarly, this needs to be explored in the VC governance model i.e. where is the risk and how does it get mitigated, who is responsible when a VC for legitimate reasons shouldn't have been accepted.
- Drummond Reed there is no need to change in the current governance framework as Steve was messaging to a different audience to make it more relatable to them. Steve used an example of a DMV and age verification at a liquor store.
- Scott Perry in the payment card industry, they have a very robust accreditation and audit model (over 20 years).
- Savita Farooqui is working with California DMV and has similar challenges.
- Neil Thomson this diagram (FIg.1) is a support network, the processes and trust chain behind the issuer. Savita Farooqui agrees it also relates to the reputation of the issuer and we need to look at it at one level but this can be recursive.
- Drummond Reed the key takeaway is to do things efficiently and to combine and do things at scale rather than a fragmented approach for governance i.e. instead of having 50 DMV governance frameworks, trust registries at federal level, can there be a single framework and trust registry at the national level. Neil Thomson suggested since provinces and federal government are known to work together, maybe can we learn and apply their cooperation mechanism.