These vendors blocked the specification because of their fear of the future. Web3 will not allow these entities to have control over their users or their data, ending the decades long surveillance and user data acquisitions.
On 1 Sep 2021, after multiple revisions and years of design and development by the W3C DID Working Group, the Mozilla Foundation filed a formal objection to block approval of the Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) v1.0 specification. This is years after the Mozilla Foundation’s Internet Health Report stated:
The Internet remains decentralized, but the things we do on it every day are controlled by just a handful of global technology giants. These companies are starting to look more and more like monopolies of the past. Given the importance of the Internet in our lives, this is not healthy.
Soon after, it became public that two other formal objections were also filed. This time by Google and Apple. This means that three of the four biggest browser vendors had voted to block the DID 1.0 Specification.
I think after years of centralization, it seems to me that things are finally starting to decentralize again.
I don't know what these decentralized identifiers do, but regardless of whatever additional standards are added, I think the impetus to decentralize needs to come from the bottom. We all need to say that we're not okay with handing everything to a small number of megacorps.
Vote with our feet
And with our hands, building our own.
Hey, on that topic, thanks for the work you put into exploding-heads, btw. I appreciate the interesting stories on my feed all the time.
Thanks. I appreciate you saying so.