Replies (1)

The notes below have some initial discussion of how Inkan works. The screenshots in the first note contain useful hints indicating what exactly it is doing. I think, however, that the best way to understand it is to log in and access the identity features of the client. This allows you to observe the existing permanent identities and click through the delegation / timestamp backup data that supports these identities. I've put your pubkey on the allow list for accessing the identity features. One of the notes below includes an initial "tour guide" that helps one get started / oriented. If you're interested, please log in and take a look, or please feel free to ask questions, express scepticism, etc. Happy to talk about anything related to it. View quoted note → View quoted note → View quoted note → View quoted note →
inkan's avatar inkan
Inkan enables you to revoke and replace key pairs when your private key has been lost or stolen. You can also perform periodic key rotations preemptively. You can do all this in a decentralized manner. That way Inkan gives you a permanent online identity that only you control, and that you can be confident you can keep over the long-term. For example 50 years. Inkan is open for testing and comment. Let me know if you'd like to try it out.
View quoted note →