Autheo

What does W3C DID Core compliance mean for a blockchain identity system?

W3C DID Core compliance is the entry point for any serious DID implementation. Developers evaluating identity infrastructure should verify compliance claims against the official test suite and specification, not just marketing materials.

Direct Answer

W3C DID Core compliance means a system correctly implements the W3C Decentralized Identifier specification: using the did:method:id URI format, producing and resolving DID Documents with standard fields (id, verificationMethod, authentication, service), and supporting the standard DID resolution algorithm. Compliance ensures that credentials and identity assertions can be verified across different platforms and implementations.

Understand the broader Autheo platform

This answer covers one part of the Autheo ecosystem. To understand how this capability fits into the full platform, start with the core Autheo overview and architecture pages.

What the W3C DID Core spec defines

The spec defines the DID syntax (a URI with three components: scheme, method, and method-specific identifier), the structure of a DID Document (a JSON-LD document containing public keys, service endpoints, and authentication relationships), and the abstract DID resolution interface. It does not specify how a particular DID method stores or resolves data, leaving that to individual method specifications.

Why compliance matters for interoperability

DID Core compliance is the interoperability baseline. A holder using did:indy credentials should be able to present them to a verifier using a different DID method, as long as both support the W3C resolution protocol. Without compliance, identity assertions are locked to a single vendor or platform. All major DID implementations, including TheoID, Hyperledger Indy, Veramo, Polygon ID, and Cheqd, claim W3C DID Core compliance.

TheoID and W3C compliance

TheoID is W3C DID Core compliant. Autheo's identity layer follows the standard DID URI format, produces standard DID Documents, and supports the standard resolution algorithm. The key differentiation is not compliance (which is table stakes) but the cryptographic security model: TheoID uses post-quantum key material while other compliant systems use classical cryptography.

Key Statistics

July 2022
W3C DID Core v1.0 published as a W3C Recommendation
After a multi-year standardization process with input from 50+ contributors
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100+
Registered DID methods in the W3C registry
Demonstrates widespread adoption of the standard across many blockchain ecosystems
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Citations & Sources

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