upcarta
  • Sign In
  • Sign Up
  • Explore
  • Search

$\texttt{zk-creds}$: Flexible Anonymous Credentials from zkSNARKs and Existing Identity Infrastructure

  • Paper
  • #CryptocurrencySecurity
Michael Rosenberg
@MichaelRosenberg
(Author)
eprint.iacr.org
Read on eprint.iacr.org
1 Recommender
1 Mention
Frequently, users on the web need to show that they are, for example, not a robot, old enough to access an age restricted video, or eligible to download an ebook from their local pu... Show More

Frequently, users on the web need to show that they are, for example, not a robot, old enough to access an age restricted video, or eligible to download an ebook from their local public library without being tracked. Anonymous credentials were developed to address these concerns. However, existing schemes do not handle the realities of deployment or the complexities of real world identity. Instead, they make (often incorrect) assumptions, e.g., that the local department of motor vehicles will issue sophisticated cryptographic tokens to show users are over 18. In reality, there are multiple trust sources for a given identity attribute, their credentials have distinctively different formats, and many, if not all, issuers are unwilling to adopt new protocols.

We present and build
zk-creds
, a protocol that uses general-purpose zero-knowledge proofs to 1) remove the need for credential issuers to hold signing keys: credentials can be issued via a transparency log, Byzantine system, or even a blockchain; 2) convert existing identity documents into anonymous credentials without modifying documents or coordinating with their issuing authority; 3) allow for flexible, composable, and complex identity statements over multiple credentials. Concretely, identity assertions using
zk-creds
take less than 300ms in a real-world scenario of using a passport to anonymously access age-restricted videos.

Show Less
Recommend
Post
Save
Complete
Collect
Mentions
See All
Matt DesLauriers @mattdesl · Jul 8, 2022
  • Post
  • From Twitter
Interesting paper on zero-knowledge proofs for cryptographically verifiable and anonymous credentials, identity, attestations. 👇
  • upcarta ©2025
  • Home
  • About
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • @upcarta