But I don’t think this is a perfect solution either.
One thing I keep reminding myself is that a system
like this doesn’t create trust out of thin air. It organizes it. If the source of a credential is weak or biased, the system will still reflect that. A clean structure doesn’t guarantee fairness it just makes things easier to verify.
There’s also the balance between control and openness. The more structured and “sovereign-ready” a system becomes, the more it risks leaning toward centralization. And if that happens, it starts to move away from the original spirit of crypto. That tension doesn’t go away just because the design is elegant.
And then there’s the hardest part of all the user experience.
Even if everything works perfectly behind the scenes, it still has to feel simple on the surface. If users are still confused, still worried about losing access, still unsure about what they’re signing, then the problem isn’t really solved. It’s just been moved around.