Auto-indexing as a road to self-sovereignty
On self-hosting vs. self-sovereignty:
“Self-sovereign doesn’t mean self-built. It doesn’t mean doing everything yourself. It means having (1) ownership without captivity, (2) portability without friction, and (3) interoperability without central dependence.”
The average citizen won’t be able to manage self-hosting their own servers, local AI models, etc. and the average megacorp doesn’t have incentives to adopt decentralized interoperability standards; but can the citizenry demand these standards? I don’t know. I don’t even think we need a universal digital ID tied to our SSD, but something akin to a Google sign-in that is not Google (would need to be stable, long-lasting, trusted, and serving only as the ID layer, with no other products).
I wonder if this requires people to actually care about their data. How many people have organized yearly archives of their notes, photos, correspondence, etc.? Who has the bandwidth for that? It requires extreme diligence to stay organized, but corporations have scripts (and now AI) that can create auto-organized data architectures per person. Could this be a consumer product? Ie: Imagine a private/local tool that auto-indexed your entire digital footprint, giving you full control, and then letting you deploy, revoke, summarize, find patterns, etc.