Patent filed for privacy-first, cross-platform identity authentication for NFT and other digital assets
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星期一, 十月 18, 2021
Bitcoin, P500, Government, Organization, International, Ownership, Trust, North Carolina Identity Theft Protection Act of 2005, Technology, KYC/AML, IT2, Senior, Growth, Digital, Virtual currency, NFT, Decentralized finance, Violence, ID, Central bank digital currency, Fraud, Euronext Growth, Woman, Non-fungible token, Finance, CCC, United States Patent Office fire, AIID, OTCQX, Euronext, Bridge, KindHearts for Charitable Humanitarian Development, United States Marshals Service, International Justice Mission, Mastercard, Central bank, Cryptocurrency
63/256,347 places self-sovereign identity authentication and digital asset ownership verification in the hands of the individual, is platform-agnostic, and can authenticate cross-platform transactions.
Key Points:
- 63/256,347 places self-sovereign identity authentication and digital asset ownership verification in the hands of the individual, is platform-agnostic, and can authenticate cross-platform transactions.
- The user-centric patent filing complements the recent announcement of Trust Stamp's Cryptographic Key Vault technology aimed at banks and other financial institutions, and the company's U.S.
- 63/188,491 filed in May 2021 using proprietary data transformation techniques to create non-fungible tokens capable of authenticating a physical object.
- John Bridge, Trust Stamp's Executive Vice President responsible for digital asset-related services, comments: "Digital assets are not confined to decentralized cryptocurrencies.