It was a more general remark about decentralized identity. I can't say if the average social media user wants or needs this kind of control over their identity, but I'd much rather have say my DNS tied to a cryptographic credential stored I manage than be delegated to a third party, able to say return a tampered OPENPGP entry to a specific IP without me ever knowing.
So just keep a passphrase encrypted backup offsite? Just because the tech doesn't do this contingency planning for you doesn't mean it's impossible.
Is this a real suggestion for social media users or just a fun remark on it being possible?
It was a more general remark about decentralized identity. I can't say if the average social media user wants or needs this kind of control over their identity, but I'd much rather have say my DNS tied to a cryptographic credential stored I manage than be delegated to a third party, able to say return a tampered OPENPGP entry to a specific IP without me ever knowing.