I know the privacy community is divided on this, and it’s not clear to me where the majority lies, but I’m not a fan of A.I. I’m amongst the A.I. skeptics who don’t trust it not just for privacy reasons, but also ethical reasons. I’m not convinced that even a private AI like Proton’s Lumo is a good thing. That’s why I try to avoid it.
Thank you for explaining. I think you did a great job. Visuals always help!
But doesn’t Grok or any other service you may sign in to via Google’s SSO get some data from your Google account?
E-Mail aliases were probably not as popular back then as they are now, but I have been avoiding social media SSOs for over a decade. I personally think that most people use them out of laziness because it’s faster to use an SSO than create an account with a username/email and password.
Correct me if I’m wrong, but it seems like you are suggesting that digital IDs are MORE than the digital versions of physical ID documents, they are a form of SSO, or at least they can be used as such.
If that is what you’re saying, you may be right I would argue that physical ID are kind of a physical SSO in that they are used to authenticating yourself in the real world, and sometimes in the digital world. Is that a fair analogy?