Various large banks in different geographies across the globe, have been exploring SSI for a few years now. Seven Korean institutions, including some of the largest banks in the region, have already gone live with the decentralized identity model and a longer list is following. We anticipate the customer-driven nature of this transformation to further fuel its popularity, much like Apple Pay or other solutions that brought more power to customers’ digital wallets.
In Canada, the demand is being met both at the provincial and federal levels through the sponsorship, development and rollout of various digital identity initiatives. Some notable examples are digital identity programs in the provinces of Alberta, British Colombia and Ontario. These provinces are using decentralized identity to streamline their services and cut red tape. Beyond these examples, the momentum is rapidly growing at the global level: the EU, Norway, UK, Australia, New Zealand, UAE, India, Argentina and Colombia have also started their journeys.
These models represent some of the early avatars of SSI and there is a long path ahead. But what is crystal clear at this point is that SSI is a natural evolution of how we will manage identity. Organizations across all sectors need to develop and execute on a clear strategy that bridges their existing CIAM programs with SSI — this is table stakes.
Driving value and convenience
Every conventional business model is evolving in a world where consumers are pushing for greater convenience, security and ownership over their data. Banks must also strive to evolve how business is conducted if they’re going to stay relevant. Those that can deliver will experience greater efficiency, effectiveness and growth.