Purpose

In order to be properly relied upon, every verifiable credential must be associated with a stated level of assurance.  Since there are infinite variables in play to determine the level of assurance to be assumed, it is best to classify verifiable credentials in discrete class levels.  This will allow a set of policies, practices and infrastructure to be defined and associated with specific classes.  In the pre-verifiable credential world of the internet a variety of difference class structures are loosely defined depending on where a credential is stored and the level of authentication is used on the contents of a digital certificate.  Multi-factor verification techniques are also used to upgrade amorphous classes of certificates and traffic.All Internet transactions and Verifiable Credentials have different purposes.  

In the context of today's Internet traffic, transaction are mostly untrusted which has led to digital identity theft, spoofing, man in the middle attacks and ransomware.  The advent of verifiable credentials brings the promise of a more trustworthy infrastructure for reliable transactions.  When that infrastructure is combined with other trust assurance elements, verifiable credentials can be highly trustworthy and relied upon for a myriad of transformative digital applications.

In order to define discrete class of verifiable transactions, it is key to identify the variables that make a credential more trustable.  The following are factors embodied in the class definitions:



Class 1 – Untrusted


Class 2 – Minimum Internet Grade

Class 3 – Asset Value Grade

Class 4 – High Assurance Grade