Verifiable Credential Data Integrity 1.0

Securing the Integrity of Verifiable Credential Data

W3C Working Draft

More details about this document
This version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/2023/WD-vc-data-integrity-20230713/
Latest published version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/vc-data-integrity/
Latest editor's draft:
https://w3c.github.io/vc-data-integrity/
History:
https://www.w3.org/standards/history/vc-data-integrity/
Commit history
Editors:
Manu Sporny (Digital Bazaar)
Dave Longley (Digital Bazaar) (2014-2022)
Authors:
Dave Longley (Digital Bazaar)
Manu Sporny (Digital Bazaar)
Feedback:
GitHub w3c/vc-data-integrity (pull requests, new issue, open issues)
public-vc-wg@w3.org with subject line [vc-data-integrity] … message topic … (archives)
Related Specifications
The Verifiable Credentials Data Model v2.0
The Edwards Digital Signature Algorithm Cryptosuites v1.0
The Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm Cryptosuites v1.0
The BBS Digital Signature Algorithm Cryptosuites v1.0

Abstract

This specification describes mechanisms for ensuring the authenticity and integrity of Verifiable Credentials and similar types of constrained digital documents using cryptography, especially through the use of digital signatures and related mathematical proofs.

Status of This Document

This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at https://www.w3.org/TR/.

This document was published by the Verifiable Credentials Working Group as a Working Draft using the Recommendation track.

Publication as a Working Draft does not imply endorsement by W3C and its Members.

This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.

This document was produced by a group operating under the W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.

This document is governed by the 2 November 2021 W3C Process Document.

1. Introduction

This section is non-normative.

This specification describes mechanisms for ensuring the authenticity and integrity of Verifiable Credentials and similar types of constrained digital documents using cryptography, especially through the use of digital signatures and related mathematical proofs. Cryptographic proofs enable functionality that is useful to implementors of distributed systems. For example, proofs can be used to:

1.1 How it Works

This section is non-normative.

The operation of Data Integrity is conceptually simple. To create a cryptographic proof, the following steps are performed: 1) Transformation, 2) Hashing, and 3) Proof Generation.


Diagram showing the three steps involved in the creation of a cryptographic
proof. The diagram is laid out left to right with a blue box labeled 'Data'
on the far left. The blue box travels, left to right, through three subsequent
yellow arrows labeled 'Transform Data', 'Hash Data', and 'Generate Proof'. The
resulting blue box at the far right is labeled 'Data with Proof'.
Figure 1 To create a cryptographic proof, data is transformed, hashed, and cryptographically protected.

Transformation is a process described by a transformation algorithm that takes input data and prepares it for the hashing process. One example of a possible transformation is to take a record of people's names that attended a meeting, sort the list alphabetically by the individual's family name, and rewrite the names on a piece of paper, one per line, in sorted order. Examples of transformations include canonicalization and binary-to-text encoding.

Hashing is a process described by a hashing algorithm that calculates an identifier for the transformed data using a cryptographic hash function. This process is conceptually similar to how a phone address book functions, where one takes a person's name (the input data) and maps that name to that individual's phone number (the hash). Examples of cryptographic hash functions include SHA-3 and BLAKE-3.

Proof Generation is a process described by a proof serialization algorithm that calculates a value that protects the integrity of the input data from modification or otherwise proves a certain desired threshold of trust. This process is conceptually similar to the way a wax seal can be used on an envelope containing a letter to establish trust in the sender and show that the letter has not been tampered with in transit. Examples of proof serialization functions include digital signatures and proofs of stake.

To verify a cryptographic proof, the following steps are performed: 1) Transformation, 2) Hashing, and 3) Proof Verification.


Diagram showing the three steps involved in the verification of a cryptographic
proof. The diagram is laid out left to right with a blue box labeled
'Data with Proof' on the far left. The blue box travels, left to right, through
three subsequent yellow arrows labeled 'Transform Data', 'Hash Data', and
'Verify Proof'. The resulting blue box at the far right is labeled 'Data with
Proof'.
Figure 2 To verify a cryptographic proof, data is transformed, hashed, and checked for correctness.

During verification, the transformation and hashing steps are conceptually the same as described above.

Proof Verification is a process that is described by a proof verification algorithm that applies a cryptographic proof verification function to see if the input data can be trusted. Possible proof verification functions include digital signatures and proofs of stake.

This specification details how cryptographic software architects and implementers can package these processes together into things called cryptographic suites and provide them to application developers for the purposes of protecting the integrity of application data in transit and at rest.

1.2 Design Goals and Rationale

This section is non-normative.

This specification optimizes for the following design goals:

Simplicity
The technology is designed to be easy to use for application developers, without requiring significant training in cryptography. It optimizes for the following priority of constituencies: application developers over cryptographic suite implementers, over cryptographic suite designers, over cryptographic algorithm specification authors. The solution focuses on sensible defaults to prevent the selection of ineffective protection mechanisms. See section 5.2 Protecting Application Developers and 5.1 Versioning Cryptography Suites for further details.
Composability
A number of historical digital signature mechanisms have had monolithic designs which limited use cases by combining data transformation, syntax, digital signature, and serialization into a single specification. This specification layers each component such that a broader range of use cases are enabled, including generalized selective disclosure and serialization-agnostic signatures. See section 5.4 Transformations, section 5.5 Data Opacity, and 5.1 Versioning Cryptography Suites for further rationale.
Resilience
Since digital proof mechanisms might be compromised without warning due to technological advancements, it is important that cryptographic suites provide multiple layers of protection and can be rapidly upgraded. This specification provides for both algorithmic agility and cryptographic layering, while still keeping the digital proof format easy for developers to understand and use. See section 5.3 Agility and Layering to understand the particulars.
Progressive Extensibility
Creating and deploying new cryptographic protection mechanisms is designed to be a deliberate, iterative, and careful process that acknowledges that extension happens in phases from experimentation, to implementation, to standardization. This specification strives to balance the need for an increase in the rate of innovation in cryptography with the need for stable production-grade cryptography suites. See section 3. Cryptographic Suites for instructions on establishing new types of cryptographic proofs.
Serialization Flexibility
Cryptographic proofs can be serialized in many different but equivalent ways and have often been tightly bound to the original document syntax. This specification enables one to create cryptographic proofs that are not bound to the original document syntax, which enables more advanced use cases such as being able to use a single digital signature across a variety of serialization syntaxes such as JSON and CBOR without the need to regenerate the cryptographic proof. See section 5.4 Transformations for an explanation of the benefits of such an approach.
Note: Application of technology to broader use cases

While this specification primarily focuses on Verifiable Credentials, the design of this technology is generalized, such that it can be used for non-Verifiable Credential use cases. In these instances, implementers are expected to perform their own due diligence and expert review as to the applicability of the technology to their use case.

1.3 Conformance

As well as sections marked as non-normative, all authoring guidelines, diagrams, examples, and notes in this specification are non-normative. Everything else in this specification is normative.

The key words MAY, MUST, MUST NOT, OPTIONAL, RECOMMENDED, and SHOULD in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.

1.4 Terminology

This section is non-normative.

This section defines the terms used in this specification. A link to these terms is included whenever they appear in this specification.

data integrity proof
A set of attributes that represent a digital proof and the parameters required to verify it.
public key
Cryptographic material that can be used to verify digital proofs created with a corresponding private key.
private key
Cryptographic material that can be used to generate digital proofs.
proof type
A specified set of cryptographic primitives bundled together into a cryptographic suite for the purposes of safety and convenience, by cryptographers for developers (see the section on cryptographic suites).
proof options
A set of options that is included in the proof data. These options might include controller, challenge, domain, or other data that is specific to the proof format.
proof purpose
The specific intent for the proof; the reason why an entity created it. The protected declaration acts as a safeguard to prevent the proof from being misused for a purpose other than the one it was intended for.
challenge
A random or pseudo-random value used by some authentication protocols to mitigate replay attacks.
domain
A string value that specifies the operational domain of a digital proof. This could be an Internet domain name like example.com, an ad-hoc value such as mycorp-level3-access, or a very specific transaction value like 8zF6T8J34qP3mqP. A signer could include a domain in its digital proof to restrict its use to particular target, identified by the specified domain.
authentication
A process by which an entity can prove to a verifier that it has a specific attribute or controls a specific secret.
cryptographic suite
A specification defining the usage of specific cryptographic primitives in order to achieve a particular security goal. These documents are often used to specify verification methods, digital signature types, their identifiers, and other related properties.
decentralized identifier (DID)
A globally unique persistent identifier that does not require a centralized registration authority and is often generated and/or registered cryptographically. The generic format of a is defined in [DID-CORE]. Many—but not all—methods make use of distributed ledger technology (DLT) or some other form of decentralized network.
controller
An entity that has the capability to make changes to a controller document.
controller document
A set of data that specifies one or more relationships between a controller and a set of data, such as a set of public cryptographic keys.
subject
The entity identified by the id property in a controller document. Anything can be a subject: person, group, organization, physical thing, digital thing, logical thing, etc.
distributed ledger (DLT)
A non-centralized system for recording events. These systems establish sufficient confidence for participants to rely upon the data recorded by others to make operational decisions. They typically use distributed databases where different nodes use a consensus protocol to confirm the ordering of cryptographically signed transactions. The linking of digitally signed transactions over time often makes the history of the ledger effectively immutable.
resource
As defined by [RFC3986]: "...the term 'resource' is used in a general sense for whatever might be identified by a URI." Similarly, any resource might serve as a subject identified by a DID.
verifier
A role an entity performs by receiving data containing one or more data integrity proofs and then determining whether or not the proof is valid.
verifiable credential
A standard data model and representation format for cryptographically-verifiable digital credentials as defined by the W3C Verifiable Credentials specification [VC-DATA-MODEL-2.0].
verification method

A set of parameters that can be used together with a process to independently verify a proof. For example, a cryptographic public key can be used as a verification method with respect to a digital signature; in such usage, it verifies that the signer possessed the associated cryptographic private key.

"Verification" and "proof" in this definition are intended to apply broadly. For example, a cryptographic public key might be used during Diffie-Hellman key exchange to negotiate a shared symmetric key for encryption. This guarantees the integrity of the key agreement process. It is thus another type of verification method, even though descriptions of the process might not use the words "verification" or "proof."

verification relationship

An expression of the relationship between the subject and a verification method. An example of a verification relationship is authentication.

2. Data Model

This section specifies the data model that is used for expressing data integrity proofs, controller documents, and verification methods.

2.1 Proofs

A data integrity proof provides information about the proof mechanism, parameters required to verify that proof, and the proof value itself. All of this information is provided using Linked Data vocabularies such as the [SECURITY-VOCABULARY].

The following attributes are defined for use in a data integrity proof:

id
An optional identifier for the proof, which MUST be a URL [URL], such as a UUID as a URN (urn:uuid:6a1676b8-b51f-11ed-937b-d76685a20ff5). The usage of this property is further explained in Section 2.1.2 Proof Chains.
type
The specific proof type used for the cryptographic proof MUST be specified as a string that maps to a URL [URL]. Examples of proof types include DataIntegrityProof and Ed25519Signature2020. Proof types determine what other fields are required to secure and verify the proof.
proofPurpose
The reason the proof was created MUST be specified as a string that maps to a URL [URL]. The proof purpose acts as a safeguard to prevent the proof from being misused by being applied to a purpose other than the one that was intended. For example, without this value the creator of a proof could be tricked into using cryptographic material typically used to create a Verifiable Credential (assertionMethod) during a login process (authentication) which would then result in the creation of a Verifiable Credential they never meant to create instead of the intended action, which was to merely logging into a website.
verificationMethod
The means and information needed to verify the proof MUST be specified as a string that maps to a [URL]. An example of a verification method is a link to a public key which includes cryptographic material that is used by a verifier during the verification process.
created
The date and time the proof was created MUST be specified as an [XMLSCHEMA11-2] combined date and time string.
domain
The creator of a proof SHOULD include a string value that indicates its intended usage, which a verifier SHOULD use to ensure the proof was intended to be used by them. The specification of the domain parameter is useful in challenge-response protocols where the verifier is operating from within a security domain known to the creator of the proof. Examples of a domain parameter include: domain.example (DNS domain), https://domain.example:8443 (full Web origin), mycorp-intranet (well-known text string), and b31d37d4-dd59-47d3-9dd8-c973da43b63a (UUID).
challenge
A string value that SHOULD be included in a proof if a domain is specified. The value is used once for a particular domain and window of time. This value is used to mitigate replay attacks. Examples of a challenge value include: 1235abcd6789, 79d34551-ae81-44ae-823b-6dadbab9ebd4, and ruby.
proofValue
A string value that contains the data necessary to verify the digital proof using the verificationMethod specified. The contents of the value MUST be a [MULTIBASE]-encoded binary value. Alternative fields with different encodings MAY be used to encode the data necessary to verify the digital proof instead of this value. The contents of this value are determined by a cryptosuite and set to the proof value generated by the Add Proof Algorithm.
previousProof
An optional string value that identifies another data integrity proof that MUST verify before the current proof is processed. This property is used in Section 2.1.2 Proof Chains.
Note

All of the terms above map to URLs. The vocabulary where these terms are defined is the [SECURITY-VOCABULARY].

A proof can be added to a JSON document like the following:

Example 1: A simple JSON data document
{
  "title": "Hello world!"
};

The following proof secures the document above using the jcs-eddsa-2022 cryptography suite [DI-EDDSA], which produces a verifiable digital proof by transforming the input data using the JSON Canonicalization Scheme (JCS) [RFC8785] and then digitally signing it using an Edwards Digital Signature Algorithm (EdDSA).

Example 2: A simple signed JSON data document
{
  "title": "Hello world!",
  "proof": {
    "type": "DataIntegrityProof",
    "cryptosuite": "jcs-eddsa-2022",
    "created": "2023-03-05T19:23:24Z",
    "verificationMethod": "https://di.example/issuer#z6MkjLrk3gKS2nnkeWcmcxiZPGskmesDpuwRBorgHxUXfxnG",
    "proofPurpose": "assertionMethod",
    "proofValue": "zQeVbY4oey5q2M3XKaxup3tmzN4DRFTLVqpLMweBrSxMY2xHX5XTYV8nQApmEcqaqA3Q1gVHMrXFkXJeV6doDwLWx"
  }
}

Similarly, a proof can be added to a JSON-LD data document like the following:

Example 3: A simple JSON-LD data document
{
  "@context": {"title": "https://schema.org/title"},
  "title": "Hello world!"
};

The following proof secures the document above by using the ecdsa-2019 cryptography suite [DI-ECDSA], which produces a verifiable digital proof by transforming the input data using the RDF Dataset Canonicalization Scheme [RDF-CANON] and then digitally signing it using the Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA).

Example 4: A simple signed JSON-LD data document
{
  "@context": [
    {"title": "https://schema.org/title"},
    "https://w3id.org/security/data-integrity/v1"
  ],
  "title": "Hello world!",
  "proof": {
    "type": "DataIntegrityProof",
    "cryptosuite": "ecdsa-2019",
    "created": "2020-06-11T19:14:04Z",
    "verificationMethod": "https://ldi.example/issuer#zDnaepBuvsQ8cpsWrVKw8fbpGpvPeNSjVPTWoq6cRqaYzBKVP",
    "proofPurpose": "assertionMethod",
    "proofValue": "zXb23ZkdakfJNUhiTEdwyE598X7RLrkjnXEADLQZ7vZyUGXX8cyJZRBkNw813SGsJHWrcpo4Y8hRJ7adYn35Eetq"
  }
}
Issue
Add a note indicating that selective disclosure proof mechanisms can be compatible with Data Integrity; for example, an algorithm could produce a merkle tree from a canonicalized set of N-Quads and then sign the root hash. Disclosure would involve including the merkle paths for each N-Quad that is to be revealed. This mechanism would merely consume the normalized output differently (this, and the proof mechanism would be modifications to this core spec). It might also be necessary to generate proof parameters such as a private key/seed that can be used along with an algorithm to deterministically generate nonces that are concatenated with each N-Quad to prevent rainbow table or similar attacks.
Issue
Add a note indicating that this specification should not be construed to indicate that public key controllers should be restricted to a single public key or that systems that use this spec and involve real people should identify each person as only ever being a single entity rather than perhaps N entities with M keys. There are no such restrictions and in many cases those kinds of restrictions are ill-advised due to privacy considerations.

The Data Integrity specification supports the concept of multiple proofs in a single document. There are two types of multi-proof approaches that are identified: Proof Sets (un-ordered) and Proof Chains (ordered).

2.1.1 Proof Sets

A proof set is useful when the same data needs to be secured by multiple entities, but where the order of proofs does not matter, such as in the case of a set of signatures on a contract. A proof set, which has no order, is represented by associating a set of proofs with the proof key in a document.

Example 5: A proof set in a data document
{
  "@context": [
    {"title": "https://schema.org/title"},
    "https://w3id.org/security/data-integrity/v1"
],
  "title": "Hello world!",
  "proof": [{
    "type": "DataIntegrityProof",
    "cryptosuite": "eddsa-2022",
    "created": "2020-11-05T19:23:24Z",
    "verificationMethod": "https://ldi.example/issuer/1#z6MkjLrk3gKS2nnkeWcmcxiZPGskmesDpuwRBorgHxUXfxnG",
    "proofPurpose": "assertionMethod",
    "proofValue": "z4oey5q2M3XKaxup3tmzN4DRFTLVqpLMweBrSxMY2xHX5XTYVQeVbY8nQAVHMrXFkXJpmEcqdoDwLWxaqA3Q1geV6"
  }, {
    "type": "DataIntegrityProof",
    "cryptosuite": "eddsa-2022",
    "created": "2020-11-05T13:08:49Z",
    "verificationMethod": "https://pfps.example/issuer/2#z6MkGskxnGjLrk3gKS2mesDpuwRBokeWcmrgHxUXfnncxiZP",
    "proofPurpose": "assertionMethod",
    "proofValue": "z5QLBrp19KiWXerb8ByPnAZ9wujVFN8PDsxxXeMoyvDqhZ6Qnzr5CG9876zNht8BpStWi8H2Mi7XCY3inbLrZrm95"
  }]
}

2.1.2 Proof Chains

A proof chain is useful when the same data needs to be signed by multiple entities and the order of when the proofs occurred matters, such as in the case of a notary counter-signing a proof that had been created on a document. A proof chain, where proof order needs to be preserved, is expressed by providing at least one proof with an id, such as a UUID as a URN, and another proof with a previousProof value that identifies the previous proof.

Example 6: A proof chain in a data document
{
  "@context": [
    {"title": "https://schema.org/title"},
    "https://w3id.org/security/data-integrity/v1"
],
  "title": "Hello world!",
  "proof": [{
    "id": "urn:uuid:60102d04-b51e-11ed-acfe-2fcd717666a7",
    "type": "DataIntegrityProof",
    "cryptosuite": "eddsa-2022",
    "created": "2020-11-05T19:23:42Z",
    "verificationMethod": "https://ldi.example/issuer/1#z6MkjLrk3gKS2nnkeWcmcxiZPGskmesDpuwRBorgHxUXfxnG",
    "proofPurpose": "assertionMethod",
    "proofValue": "zVbY8nQAVHMrXFkXJpmEcqdoDwLWxaqA3Q1geV64oey5q2M3XKaxup3tmzN4DRFTLVqpLMweBrSxMY2xHX5XTYVQe"
  }, {
    "type": "DataIntegrityProof",
    "cryptosuite": "eddsa-2022",
    "created": "2020-11-05T21:28:14Z",
    "verificationMethod": "https://pfps.example/issuer/2#z6MkGskxnGjLrk3gKS2mesDpuwRBokeWcmrgHxUXfnncxiZP",
    "proofPurpose": "assertionMethod",
    "proofValue": "z6Qnzr5CG9876zNht8BpStWi8H2Mi7XCY3inbLrZrm955QLBrp19KiWXerb8ByPnAZ9wujVFN8PDsxxXeMoyvDqhZ",
    "previousProof": "urn:uuid:60102d04-b51e-11ed-acfe-2fcd717666a7"
  }]
}

2.2 Proof Purposes

A proof that describes its purpose helps prevent it from being misused for some other purpose.

Issue

Add a mention of JWK's key_ops parameter and WebCrypto's KeyUsage restrictions; explain that Proof Purpose serves a different goal and allows for finer-grained restrictions.

Dave Longley suggested that proof purposes enable verifiers to know what the proof creator's intent was so the message can't be accidentally abused for another purpose, e.g., a message signed for the purpose of merely making an assertion (and thus perhaps intended to be widely shared) being abused as a message to authenticate to a service or take some action (invoke a capability). It's a goal to keep the number of them limited to as few categories as are really needed to accomplish this goal.

The following is a list of commonly used proof purpose values.

authentication
Indicates that a given proof is only to be used for the purposes of an authentication protocol.
assertionMethod
Indicates that a proof can only be used for making assertions, for example signing a Verifiable Credential.
keyAgreement
Indicates that a proof is used for for key agreement protocols, such as Elliptic Curve Diffie Hellman key agreement used by popular encryption libraries.
capabilityDelegation
Indicates that the proof can only be used for delegating capabilities. See the Authorization Capabilities [ZCAP] specification for more detail.
capabilityInvocation
Indicates that the proof can only be used for invoking capabilities. See the Authorization Capabilities [ZCAP] specification for more detail.

Note: The Authorization Capabilities [ZCAP] specification defines additional proof purposes for that use case, such as capabilityInvocation and capabilityDelegation.

2.3 Controller Documents

A controller document is a set of data that specifies one or more relationships between a controller and a set of data, such as a set of public cryptographic keys. The controller document SHOULD contain verification relationships that explicitly permit the use of certain verification methods for specific purposes.

Issue
Add examples of common Controller documents, such as controller documents published on a ledger-based registry, or on a mutable medium in combination with an integrity protection mechanism such as Hashlinks.

2.3.1 Verification Methods

A controller document can express verification methods, such as cryptographic public keys, which can be used to authenticate or authorize interactions with the controller or associated parties. For example, a cryptographic public key can be used as a verification method with respect to a digital signature; in such usage, it verifies that the signer could use the associated cryptographic private key. Verification methods might take many parameters. An example of this is a set of five cryptographic keys from which any three are required to contribute to a cryptographic threshold signature.

verificationMethod

The verificationMethod property is OPTIONAL. If present, the value MUST be a set of verification methods, where each verification method is expressed using a map. The verification method map MUST include the id, type, controller, and specific verification material properties that are determined by the value of type and are defined in 2.3.1.1 Verification Material. A verification method MAY include additional properties. Verification methods SHOULD be registered in the Data Integrity Specification Registries [TBD - DIS-REGISTRIES].

id

The value of the id property for a verification method MUST be a string that conforms to the conforms to the [URL] syntax.

type
The value of the type property MUST be a string that references exactly one verification method type. In order to maximize global interoperability, the verification method type SHOULD be registered in the Data Integrity Specification Registries [TBD -- DIS-REGISTRIES].
controller
The value of the controller property MUST be a string that conforms to the [URL] syntax.
Example 7: Example verification method structure
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/did/v1",
    "https://w3id.org/security/data-integrity/v1"
  ]
  "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
  ...
  "verificationMethod": [{
    "id": ...,
    "type": ...,
    "controller": ...,
    "publicKeyJwk": ...
  }, {
    "id": ...,
    "type": ...,
    "controller": ...,
    "publicKeyMultibase": ...
  }]
}
Note: Verification method controller(s) and controller(s)

The semantics of the controller property are the same when the subject of the relationship is the controller document as when the subject of the relationship is a verification method, such as a cryptographic public key. Since a key can't control itself, and the key controller cannot be inferred from the controller document, it is necessary to explicitly express the identity of the controller of the key. The difference is that the value of controller for a verification method is not necessarily a controller. controllers are expressed using the `controller` property at the highest level of the controller document.

2.3.1.1 Verification Material

Verification material is any information that is used by a process that applies a verification method. The type of a verification method is expected to be used to determine its compatibility with such processes. Examples of verification material properties are `publicKeyJwk or publicKeyMultibase`. A cryptographic suite specification is responsible for specifying the verification method type and its associated verification material. For example, see JSON Web Signature 2020 and Ed25519 Signature 2020. For all registered verification method types and associated verification material available for controllers, please see the Data Integrity Specification Registries [TBD - DIS-REGISTRIES].

To increase the likelihood of interoperable implementations, this specification limits the number of formats for expressing verification material in a controller document. The fewer formats that implementers have to implement, the more likely it will be that they will support all of them. This approach attempts to strike a delicate balance between ease of implementation and supporting formats that have historically had broad deployment. Two supported verification material properties are listed below:

publicKeyJwk

The publicKeyJwk property is OPTIONAL. If present, the value MUST be a map representing a JSON Web Key that conforms to [RFC7517]. The map MUST NOT contain "d", or any other members of the private information class as described in Registration Template. It is RECOMMENDED that verification methods that use JWKs [RFC7517] to represent their public keys use the value of kid as their fragment identifier. It is RECOMMENDED that JWK kid values are set to the public key fingerprint [RFC7638]. See the first key in Example 8 for an example of a public key with a compound key identifier.

publicKeyMultibase

The publicKeyMultibase property is OPTIONAL. This feature is non-normative. If present, the value MUST be a string representation of a [MULTIBASE] encoded public key.

Note that the [MULTIBASE] specification is not yet a standard and is subject to change. There might be some use cases for this data format where `publicKeyMultibase` is defined, to allow for expression of public keys, but `privateKeyMultibase` is not defined, to protect against accidental leakage of secret keys.

A verification method MUST NOT contain multiple verification material properties for the same material. For example, expressing key material in a verification method using both publicKeyJwk and publicKeyMultibase at the same time is prohibited.

An example of a controller document containing verification methods using both properties above is shown below.

Example 8: Verification methods using publicKeyJwk and publicKeyMultibase
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/did/v1",
    "https://w3id.org/security/suites/jws-2020/v1",
    "https://w3id.org/security/multikey/v1"
  ]
  "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
  ...
  "verificationMethod": [{
    "id": "did:example:123#_Qq0UL2Fq651Q0Fjd6TvnYE-faHiOpRlPVQcY_-tA4A",
    "type": "JsonWebKey2020", // external (property value)
    "controller": "did:example:123",
    "publicKeyJwk": {
      "crv": "Ed25519", // external (property name)
      "x": "VCpo2LMLhn6iWku8MKvSLg2ZAoC-nlOyPVQaO3FxVeQ", // external (property name)
      "kty": "OKP", // external (property name)
      "kid": "_Qq0UL2Fq651Q0Fjd6TvnYE-faHiOpRlPVQcY_-tA4A" // external (property name)
    }
  }, {
    "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-1",
    "type": "Multikey", // external (property value)
    "controller": "did:example:pqrstuvwxyz0987654321",
    "publicKeyMultibase": "z6MkmM42vxfqZQsv4ehtTjFFxQ4sQKS2w6WR7emozFAn5cxu"
  }],
  ...
}
2.3.1.2 Multikey

The Multikey data model is a specific type of verification method that utilizes the [MULTICODEC] specification to encode key types into a single binary stream that is then encoded using the [MULTIBASE] specification. To encode a Multikey, the verification method type MUST be set to Multikey and the publicKeyMultibase value MUST be a [MULTIBASE] encoded [MULTICODEC] value. An example of a Multikey is provided below:

Example 9: Multikey encoding of a Ed25519 public key
{
  "@context": ["https://w3id.org/security/multikey/v1"],
  "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-1",
  "type": "Multikey",
  "controller": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
  "publicKeyMultibase": "z6MkmM42vxfqZQsv4ehtTjFFxQ4sQKS2w6WR7emozFAn5cxu"
}

In the example above, the publicKeyMultibase value starts with the letter z, which is the [MULTIBASE] header that conveys that the binary data is base58-encoded using the Bitcoin base-encoding alphabet. The decoded binary data [MULTICODEC] header is 0xed, which specifies that the remaining data is a 32-byte raw Ed25519 public key.

The Multikey data model is also capable of encoding secret keys, sometimes referred to as private keys.

Example 10: Multikey encoding of a Ed25519 secret key
{
  "@context": ["https://w3id.org/security/suites/secrets/v1"],
  "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-1",
  "type": "Multikey",
  "controller": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
  "secretKeyMultibase": "z3u2fprgdREFtGakrHr6zLyTeTEZtivDnYCPZmcSt16EYCER"
}

In the example above, the secretKeyMultibase value starts with the letter z, which is the [MULTIBASE] header that conveys that the binary data is base58-encoded using the Bitcoin base-encoding alphabet. The decoded binary data [MULTICODEC] header is 0x1300, which specifies that the remaining data is a 32-byte raw Ed25519 private key.

2.3.1.3 Referring to Verification Methods

Verification methods can be embedded in or referenced from properties associated with various verification relationships as described in 2.3.2 Verification Relationships. Referencing verification methods allows them to be used by more than one verification relationship.

If the value of a verification method property is a map, the verification method has been embedded and its properties can be accessed directly. However, if the value is a URL string, the verification method has been included by reference and its properties will need to be retrieved from elsewhere in the controller document or from another controller document. This is done by dereferencing the URL and searching the resulting resource for a verification method map with an id property whose value matches the URL.

Example 11: Embedding and referencing verification methods
    {
...

      "authentication": [
        // this key is referenced and might be used by
        // more than one verification relationship
        "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-1",
        // this key is embedded and may *only* be used for authentication
        {
          "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-2",
          "type": "Multikey", // external (property value)
          "controller": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
          "publicKeyMultibase": "z6MkmM42vxfqZQsv4ehtTjFFxQ4sQKS2w6WR7emozFAn5cxu"
        }
      ],

...
    }

2.3.2 Verification Relationships

A verification relationship expresses the relationship between the controller and a verification method.

Different verification relationships enable the associated verification methods to be used for different purposes. It is up to a verifier to ascertain the validity of a verification attempt by checking that the verification method used is contained in the appropriate verification relationship property of the controller document.

The verification relationship between the controller and the verification method is explicit in the controller document. Verification methods that are not associated with a particular verification relationship cannot be used for that verification relationship. For example, a verification method in the value of the `authentication` property cannot be used to engage in key agreement protocols with the controller—the value of the `keyAgreement` property needs to be used for that.

The controller document does not express revoked keys using a verification relationship. If a referenced verification method is not in the latest controller document used to dereference it, then that verification method is considered invalid or revoked.

The following sections define several useful verification relationships. A controller document MAY include any of these, or other properties, to express a specific verification relationship. In order to maximize global interoperability, any such properties used SHOULD be registered in the Data Integrity Specification Registries [TBD: DIS-REGISTRIES].

2.3.2.1 Authentication

The authentication verification relationship is used to specify how the controller is expected to be authenticated, for purposes such as logging into a website or engaging in any sort of challenge-response protocol.

authentication
The authentication property is OPTIONAL. If present, the associated value MUST be a set of one or more verification methods. Each verification method MAY be embedded or referenced.
Example 12: Authentication property containing three verification methods
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/did/v1",
    "https://w3id.org/security/multikey/v1"
  ],
  "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
  ...
  "authentication": [
    // this method can be used to authenticate as did:...fghi
    "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-1",
    // this method is *only* approved for authentication, it may not
    // be used for any other proof purpose, so its full description is
    // embedded here rather than using only a reference
    {
      "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-2",
      "type": "Multikey",
      "controller": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
      "publicKeyMultibase": "z6MkmM42vxfqZQsv4ehtTjFFxQ4sQKS2w6WR7emozFAn5cxu"
    }
  ],
  ...
}

If authentication is established, it is up to the application to decide what to do with that information.

This is useful to any authentication verifier that needs to check to see if an entity that is attempting to authenticate is, in fact, presenting a valid proof of authentication. When a verifier receives some data (in some protocol-specific format) that contains a proof that was made for the purpose of "authentication", and that says that an entity is identified by the id, then that verifier checks to ensure that the proof can be verified using a verification method (e.g., public key) listed under `authentication` in the controller document.

Note that the verification method indicated by the `authentication` property of a controller document can only be used to authenticate the controller. To authenticate a different controller, the entity associated with the value of controller needs to authenticate with its own controller document and associated `authentication` verification relationship.

2.3.2.2 Assertion

The assertionMethod verification relationship is used to specify how the controller is expected to express claims, such as for the purposes of issuing a Verifiable Credential [VC-DATA-MODEL-2.0].

assertionMethod
The assertionMethod property is OPTIONAL. If present, the associated value MUST be a set of one or more verification methods. Each verification method MAY be embedded or referenced.

This property is useful, for example, during the processing of a verifiable credential by a verifier. During verification, a verifier checks to see if a verifiable credential contains a proof created by the controller by checking that the verification method used to assert the proof is associated with the `assertionMethod` property in the corresponding controller document.

Example 13: Assertion method property containing two verification methods
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/did/v1",
    "https://w3id.org/security/multikey/v1"
  ],
  "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
  ...
  "assertionMethod": [
    // this method can be used to assert statements as did:...fghi
    "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-1",
    // this method is *only* approved for assertion of statements, it is not
    // used for any other verification relationship, so its full description is
    // embedded here rather than using a reference
    {
      "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-2",
      "type": "Multikey", // external (property value)
      "controller": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
      "publicKeyMultibase": "z6MkmM42vxfqZQsv4ehtTjFFxQ4sQKS2w6WR7emozFAn5cxu"
    }
  ],
  ...
}
2.3.2.3 Key Agreement

The keyAgreement verification relationship is used to specify how an entity can generate encryption material in order to transmit confidential information intended for the controller, such as for the purposes of establishing a secure communication channel with the recipient.

keyAgreement
The keyAgreement property is OPTIONAL. If present, the associated value MUST be a set of one or more verification methods. Each verification method MAY be embedded or referenced.

An example of when this property is useful is when encrypting a message intended for the controller. In this case, the counterparty uses the cryptographic public key information in the verification method to wrap a decryption key for the recipient.

Example 14: Key agreement property containing two verification methods
{
  "@context": "https://www.w3.org/ns/did/v1",
  "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
  ...
  "keyAgreement": [
    // this method can be used to perform key agreement as did:...fghi
    "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-1",
    // this method is *only* approved for key agreement usage, it will not
    // be used for any other verification relationship, so its full description is
    // embedded here rather than using only a reference
    {
      "id": "did:example:123#zC9ByQ8aJs8vrNXyDhPHHNNMSHPcaSgNpjjsBYpMMjsTdS",
      "type": "X25519KeyAgreementKey2019", // external (property value)
      "controller": "did:example:123",
      "publicKeyMultibase": "z6LSn6p3HRxx1ZZk1dT9VwcfTBCYgtNWdzdDMKPZjShLNWG7"
    }
  ],
  ...
}
2.3.2.4 Capability Invocation

The capabilityInvocation verification relationship is used to specify a verification method that might be used by the controller to invoke a cryptographic capability, such as the authorization to update the controller document.

capabilityInvocation
The capabilityInvocation property is OPTIONAL. If present, the associated value MUST be a set of one or more verification methods. Each verification method MAY be embedded or referenced.

An example of when this property is useful is when a controller needs to access a protected HTTP API that requires authorization in order to use it. In order to authorize when using the HTTP API, the controller uses a capability that is associated with a particular URL that is exposed via the HTTP API. The invocation of the capability could be expressed in a number of ways, e.g., as a digitally signed message that is placed into the HTTP Headers.

The server providing the HTTP API is the verifier of the capability and it would need to verify that the verification method referred to by the invoked capability exists in the `capabilityInvocation` property of the controller document. The verifier would also check to make sure that the action being performed is valid and the capability is appropriate for the resource being accessed. If the verification is successful, the server has cryptographically determined that the invoker is authorized to access the protected resource.

Example 15: Capability invocation property containing two verification methods
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/did/v1",
    "https://w3id.org/security/multikey/v1"
  ],
  "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
  ...
  "capabilityInvocation": [
    // this method can be used to invoke capabilities as did:...fghi
    "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-1",
    // this method is *only* approved for capability invocation usage, it will not
    // be used for any other verification relationship, so its full description is
    // embedded here rather than using only a reference
    {
    "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-2",
    "type": "Multikey", // external (property value)
    "controller": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
    "publicKeyMultibase": "z6MkmM42vxfqZQsv4ehtTjFFxQ4sQKS2w6WR7emozFAn5cxu"
    }
  ],
  ...
}
2.3.2.5 Capability Delegation

The capabilityDelegation verification relationship is used to specify a mechanism that might be used by the controller to delegate a cryptographic capability to another party, such as delegating the authority to access a specific HTTP API to a subordinate.

capabilityDelegation
The capabilityDelegation property is OPTIONAL. If present, the associated value MUST be a set of one or more verification methods. Each verification method MAY be embedded or referenced.

An example of when this property is useful is when a controller chooses to delegate their capability to access a protected HTTP API to a party other than themselves. In order to delegate the capability, the controller would use a verification method associated with the capabilityDelegation verification relationship to cryptographically sign the capability over to another controller. The delegate would then use the capability in a manner that is similar to the example described in 2.3.2.4 Capability Invocation.

Example 16: Capability Delegation property containing two verification methods
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/did/v1",
    "https://w3id.org/security/multikey/v1"
  ],
  "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
  ...
  "capabilityDelegation": [
    // this method can be used to perform capability delegation as did:...fghi
    "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-1",
    // this method is *only* approved for granting capabilities; it will not
    // be used for any other verification relationship, so its full description is
    // embedded here rather than using only a reference
    {
    "id": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi#keys-2",
    "type": "Multikey", // external (property value)
    "controller": "did:example:123456789abcdefghi",
    "publicKeyMultibase": "z6MkmM42vxfqZQsv4ehtTjFFxQ4sQKS2w6WR7emozFAn5cxu"
    }
  ],
  ...
}

2.4 Relationship to Linked Data

The term Linked Data is used to describe a recommended best practice for exposing, sharing, and connecting information on the Web using standards, such as URLs, to identify things and their properties. When information is presented as Linked Data, other related information can be easily discovered and new information can be easily linked to it. Linked Data is extensible in a decentralized way, greatly reducing barriers to large scale integration.

With the increase in usage of Linked Data for a variety of applications, there is a need to be able to verify the authenticity and integrity of Linked Data documents. This specification adds authentication and integrity protection to data documents through the use of mathematical proofs without sacrificing Linked Data features such as extensibility and composability.

Note: Use of Linked Data is an optional feature

While this specification provides mechanisms to digitally sign Linked Data, the use of Linked Data is not necessary to gain some of the advantages provided by this specification.

3. Cryptographic Suites

A data integrity proof is designed to be easy to use by developers and therefore strives to minimize the amount of information one has to remember to generate a proof. Often, just the cryptographic suite name (e.g. eddsa-2022) is required from developers to initiate the creation of a proof. These cryptographic suites are often created or reviewed by people that have the requisite cryptographic training to ensure that safe combinations of cryptographic primitives are used. This section specifies the requirements for authoring cryptographic suite specifications.

The requirements for all data integrity cryptographic suite specifications are as follows:

Issue: Require interoperability report?

The following language was deemed to be contentious: The specification MUST provide a link to an interoperability test report to document which implementations are conformant with the cryptographic suite specification.

The Working Group is seeking feedback on whether or not this is desired given the important role that cryptographic suite specifications play in ensuring data integrity.

3.1 DataIntegrityProof

A number of cryptographic suites follow the same basic pattern when expressing a data integrity proof. This section specifies that general design pattern, a cryptographic suite type called a DataIntegrityProof, which reduces the burden of writing and implementing cryptographic suites through the reuse of design primitives and source code.

When specifing a cryptographic suite that utilizes this design pattern, the proof value takes the following form:

type
The type property MUST contain the string DataIntegrityProof.
cryptosuite
The cryptosuite property MUST contain a string specifying the name of the cryptosuite.
proofValue
The proofValue property MUST be used, as specified in 2.1 Proofs.

Cryptographic suite designers MUST use mandatory proof value properties defined in Section 2.1 Proofs, and MAY define other properties specific to their cryptographic suite.

4. Algorithms

The algorithms defined below are generalized in that they require a specific transformation algorithm, hashing algorithm, proof serialization algorithm, and proof verification algorithm to be specified by a particular cryptographic suite (see Section 3. Cryptographic Suites).

Issue: Verification hash algorithm definition

At present the creation of the verification hash is delegated to the cryptographic suite specification when generating and verifying a proof. It is expected that this algorithm is going to be common to most cryptographic suites. It is predicted that the algorithm that generates the verification hash will eventually be defined in this specification.

4.1 Add Proof

The following algorithm specifies how to add a digital proof to a document, which can be used to verify the authenticity and integrity of an unsecured data document. Required inputs are an unsecured data document (unsecuredDocument) and proof options (options). The proof options MUST contain a type identifier for the cryptographic suite (type) and any other properties needed by the cryptographic suite type; an identifier for the verification method (verificationMethod) that can be used to verify the authenticity of the proof; and an [XMLSCHEMA11-2] combined date and time string (created) containing the current date and time, accurate to at least one second, in Universal Time Code format. A security domain (domain) and receiver-supplied challenge (challenge) might also be specified in the options. A secured data document is produced as output. Whenever this algorithm encodes strings, it MUST use UTF-8 encoding.

  1. Let output be a copy of unsecuredDocument.
  2. Let transformedData be the result of transforming unsecuredDocument according to a transformation algorithm associated with the cryptographic suite and the options parameters provided as inputs to the algorithm.
  3. Let hashData be the result of hashing the transformedData according to a hashing algorithm associated with the cryptographic suite and the options parameters provided as inputs to the algorithm.
  4. Let proof be the result of running the proof serialization algorithm associated with the cryptographic suite with the hashData and options parameters provided as inputs to the algorithm.
  5. If the proof.type, proof.verificationMethod, or proof.proofPurpose values are not set, a PROOF_GENERATION_ERROR MUST be raised.
  6. If the cryptographic suite requires the use of a created timestamp, and the proof.created value is not set, a PROOF_GENERATION_ERROR MUST be raised.
  7. If options.domain is set, it MUST be equal to proof.domain or a PROOF_GENERATION_ERROR MUST be raised.
  8. If options.challenge is set, it MUST be equal to proof.challenge or a PROOF_GENERATION_ERROR MUST be raised.
  9. Set output.proof to the value of proof.
  10. Return output as the secured data document.
Note: `hashData` might not consist of a single value

While the output of the hashing algorithm can be a single value, such as a 32 byte SHA2-256 value, implementers are advised that some cryptographic suite(s) might define hashData to be comprised of multiple values that might be processed independently in the proof serialization algorithm. For example, this approach is known to be taken in certain cryptographic suites that allow selective disclosure or unlinkability via the digital proof.

4.2 Verify Proof

The following algorithm specifies how to check the authenticity and integrity of a secured data document by verifying its digital proof. Required inputs are a secured data document (securedDocument) and proof options (options). A verification result is produced as output.

  1. Let proof be set to securedDocument.proof.
  2. If the proof.type, proof.verificationMethod, or proof.proofPurpose values are not set, a MALFORMED_PROOF_ERROR MUST be raised.
  3. If the cryptographic suite requires the proof.created value, and it is not set, a MALFORMED_PROOF_ERROR MUST be raised.
  4. If the proof.proofPurpose value does not match options.expectedProofPurpose, a MISMATCHED_PROOF_PURPOSE_ERROR MUST be raised.
  5. Let unsecuredDocument be a copy of securedDocument with the proof value removed.
  6. Let transformedData be the result of transforming the unsecuredDocument according to a transformation algorithm associated with the cryptographic suite specified in proof and the options parameters provided as inputs to the algorithm. The type of cryptographic suite is specified by the proof.type value and MAY be further described by cryptographic suite-specific properties expressed in proof.
  7. Let hashData be the result of hashing the transformedData according to a hashing algorithm associated with the cryptographic suite specified in the proof and options parameters provided as inputs to the algorithm.
  8. Let isProofVerified be the result of running the proof verification algorithm associated with the cryptographic suite with the hashData and options parameters provided as inputs to the algorithm.
  9. If the proof.created is set and it deviates more than options.acceptableCreatedTimeDeviationInSeconds seconds, a CREATED_TIME_DEVIATION_ERROR MUST be raised.
  10. If options.domain is set and it does not match proof.domain, an INVALID_DOMAIN_ERROR MUST be raised.
  11. If options.challenge is set and it does not match proof.challenge, an INVALID_CHALLENGE_ERROR MUST be raised.
  12. Return isProofVerified as the verification result.

4.3 Retrieve Verification Method

The following algorithm specifies how to safely retrieve a verification method, such as a cryptographic public key, by using a verification method identifier contained in a data integrity proof. Required inputs are a data integrity proof (proof) and a set of dereferencing options (options). A verification method is produced as output.

  1. Let vmIdentifier be set to proof.verificationMethod.
  2. Let vmPurpose be set to proof.proofPurpose.
  3. If vmIdentifier is not a valid URL, an INVALID_VERIFICATION_METHOD_URL error MUST be raised.
  4. Let controllerDocumentUrl be the result of parsing vmIdentifier according to the rules of the URL scheme and extracting the primary resource identifier (without the fragment identifier).
  5. Let vmFragment be the result of parsing vmIdentifier according to the rules of the URL scheme and extracting the secondary resource identifier (the fragment identifier).
  6. Let controllerDocument be the result of dereferencing controllerDocumentUrl, according to the rules of the URL scheme and using the supplied options.
  7. If controllerDocument.id does not match the controllerDocumentUrl, an INVALID_CONTROLLER_DOCUMENT_ID error MUST be raised.
  8. If controllerDocument is not a valid controller document, an INVALID_CONTROLLER_DOCUMENT error MUST be raised.
  9. Let verificationMethod be the result of dereferencing the vmFragment from the controllerDocument according to the rules of the media type of the controllerDocument.
  10. If verificationMethod is not a valid verification method, an INVALID_VERIFICATION_METHOD error MUST be raised.
  11. If verificationMethod is not associated with the array of vmPurposes in the controllerDocument, either by reference (URL) or by value (object), an INVALID_PROOF_PURPOSE_FOR_VERIFICATION_METHOD error MUST be raised.
  12. Return verificationMethod as the verification method.

The following example provides a minimum conformant controller document containing a minimum conformant verification method as required by the algorithm in this section:

Example 17: Minimum conformant controller document
{
  "id": "https://controller.example/123",
  "verificationMethod": [{
    "id": "https://controller.example/123#key-456",
    "type": "ExampleVerificationMethodType",
    "controller": "https://controller.example/123",
    // public cryptographic material goes here
  }],
  "authentication": ["#key-456"]
}

5. Security Considerations

The following section describes security considerations that developers implementing this specification should be aware of in order to create secure software.

5.1 Versioning Cryptography Suites

Cryptography secures information through the use of secrets. Knowledge of the necessary secret makes it computationally easy to access certain information. The same information can be accessed if a computationally-difficult, brute-force effort successfully guesses the secret. All modern cryptography requires the computationally difficult approach to remain difficult throughout time, which does not always hold due to breakthroughs in science and mathematics. That is to say that Cryptography has a shelf life.

This specification plans for the obsolescence of all cryptographic approaches by asserting that whatever cryptography is in use today is highly likely to be broken over time. Software systems have to be able to change the cryptography in use over time in order to continue to secure information. Such changes might involve increasing required secret sizes or modifications to the cryptographic primitives used. However, some combinations of cryptographic parameters might actually reduce security. Given these assumptions, systems need to be able to distinguish different combinations of safe cryptographic parameters, also known as cryptographic suites, from one another. When identifying or versioning cryptographic suites, there are several approaches that can be taken which include: parameters, numbers, and dates.

Parametric versioning specifies the particular cryptographic parameters that are employed in a cryptographic suite. For example, one could use an identifier such as RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5-SHA1. The benefit to this scheme is that a well-trained cryptographer will be able to determine all of the parameters in play by the identifier. The drawback to this scheme is that most of the population that uses these sorts of identifiers are not well trained and thus will not understand that the previously mentioned identifier is a cryptographic suite that is no longer safe to use. Additionally, this lack of knowledge might lead software developers to generalize the parsing of cryptographic suite identifiers such that any combination of cryptographic primitives becomes acceptable, resulting in reduced security. Ideally, cryptographic suites are implemented in software as specific, acceptable profiles of cryptographic parameters instead.

Numbered versioning might specify a major and minor version number such as 1.0 or 2.1. Numbered versioning conveys a specific order and suggests that higher version numbers are more capable than lower version numbers. The benefit of this approach is that it removes complex parameters that less expert developers might not understand with a simpler model that conveys that an upgrade might be appropriate. The drawback of this approach is that its not clear if an upgrade is necessary, as software version number increases often don't require an upgrade for the software to continue functioning. This can lead to developers thinking their usage of a particular version is safe, when it is not. Ideally, additional signals would be given to developers that use cryptographic suites in their software that periodic reviews of those suites for continued security are required.

Date-based versioning specifies a particular release date for a specific cryptographic suite. The benefit of a date, such as a year, is that it is immediately clear to a developer if the date is relatively old or new. Seeing an old date might prompt the developer to go searching for a newer cryptographic suite, where as a parametric or number-based versioning scheme might not. The downside of a date-based version is that some cryptographic suites might not expire for 5-10 years, prompting the developer to go searching for a newer cryptographic suite only to not find one that is newer. While this might be an inconvenience, it is one that results in safer ecosystem behavior.

Issue 38: Determine how cryptographic suites are named and versioned before CR

The following text is currently under debate:

It is highly encouraged that cryptographic suite identifiers are versioned using a year designation. For example, the cryptographic suite identifier ecdsa-2022 implies that the suite is probably an acceptable of ECDSA in the year 2025, but might not be a safe choice in the year 2042. A date-based versioning mechanism, however, is not enough by itself. All cryptographic suites that follow this specification are intended to be registered [VC-SPECS] in a way that clearly signal which cryptosuites are deprecated, standardized, or experimental. Cryptosuite registration will follow CFRG, IETF, NIST, FIPS, and safecurves guidance. Use of deprecated suites are expected to throw errors in implementations unless a useUnsafeCryptosuites option is used specifying exactly the unsafe cryptosuite to use. Use of experimental suites are expected to throw errors in implementations unless a useExperimentalCryptosuites option is used specifying exactly the experimental cryptosuite to use.

5.2 Protecting Application Developers

Modern cryptographic algorithms provide a number of tunable parameters and options to ensure that the algorithms can meet the varied requirements of different use cases. For example, embedded systems have limited processing and memory environments and might not have the resources to generate the strongest digital signatures for a given algorithm. Other environments, like financial trading systems, might only need to protect data for a day while the trade is occurring, while other environments might need to protect data for multiple decades. To meet these needs, cryptographic algorithm designers often provide multiple ways to configure a cryptographic algorithm.

Cryptographic library implementers often take the specifications created by cryptographic algorithm designers and specification authors and implement them such that all options are available to the application developers that use their libraries. This can be due to not knowing which combination of features a particular application developer might need for a given cryptographic deployment. All options are often exposed to application developers.

Application developers that use cryptographic libraries often do not have the requisite cryptographic expertise and knowledge necessary to appropriately select cryptographic parameters and options for a given application. This lack of expertise can lead to an inappropriate selection of cryptographic parameters and options for a particular application.

This specification sets the priority of constituencies to protect application developers over cryptographic library implementers over cryptographic specification authors over cryptographic algorithm designers. Given these priorities, the following recommendations are made:

The guidance above is meant to ensure that useful cryptographic options and parameters are provided at the lower layers of the architecture while not exposing those options and parameters to application developers who may not fully understand the balancing benefits and drawbacks of each option.

Issue: Use of experimental and deprecated cryptography

The VCWG is seeking guidance on adding language to allow the use of experimental or deprecated cryptography. By default, those features will be disabled and will require the application developer to specifically allow use on a per-cryptographic suite basis. There will be requirements for all implementing libraries to throw errors or warnings when deprecated or experimental options are selected without the appropriate override flags.

5.3 Agility and Layering

Cryptographic agility is a practice by which one designs frequently connected information security systems to support switching between multiple cryptographic primitives and/or algorithms. The primary goal of cryptographic agility is to enable systems to rapidly adapt to new cryptographic primitives and algorithms without making disruptive changes to the systems' infrastructure. Thus, when a particular cryptographic primitive, such as the SHA-1 algorithm, is determined to be no longer safe to use, systems can be reconfigured to use a newer primitive via a simple configuration file change.

Cryptographic agility is most effective when the client and the server in the information security system are in regular contact. However, when the messages protected by a particular cryptographic algorithm are long-lived, as with Verifiable Credentials, and/or when the client (holder) might not be able to easily recontact the server (issuer), then cryptographic agility does not provide the desired protections.

Cryptographic layering is a practice where one designs rarely connected information security systems to employ multiple primitives and/or algorithms at the same time. The primary goal of cryptographic layering is to enable systems to survive the failure or one or more cryptographic algorithms or primitives without losing cryptographic protection on the payload. For example, digitally signing a single piece of information using RSA, ECDSA, and Falcon algorithms in parallel would provide a mechanism that could survive the failure of two of these three digital signature algorithms. When a particular cryptographic protection is compromised, such as an RSA digital signature using 768-bit keys, systems can still utilize the non-compromised cryptographic protections to continue to protect the information. Developers are urged to take advantage of this feature for all signed content that might need to be protected for a year or longer.

This specification provides for both forms of agility. It provides for cryptographic agility, which allows one to easily switch from one algorithm to another. It also provides for cryptographic layering, which allows one to simultaneously use multiple cryptographic algorithms, typically in parallel, such that any of those used to protect information can be used without reliance on or requirement of the others, while still keeping the digital proof format easy to use for developers.

5.4 Transformations

At times, it is beneficial to transform the data being protected during the cryptographic protection process. Such "in-line" transformation can enable a particular type of cryptographic protection to be agnostic to the data format it is carried in. For example, some Data Integrity cryptographic suites utilize RDF Dataset Canonicalization [RDF-CANON] which transforms the initial representation into a canonical form [N-QUADS] that is then serialized, hashed, and digitally signed. As long as any syntax expressing the protected data can be transformed into this canonical form, the digital signature can be verified. This enables the same digital signature over the information to be expressed in JSON, CBOR, YAML, and other compatible syntaxes without having to create a cryptographic proof for every syntax.

Being able to express the same digital signature across a variety of syntaxes is beneficial because systems often have native data formats with which they operate. For example, some systems are written against JSON data, while others are written against CBOR data. Without transformation, systems that process their data internally as CBOR are required to store the digitally signed data structures as JSON (or vice-versa). This leads to double-storing data and can lead to increased security attack surface if the unsigned representation stored in databases accidentally deviates from the signed representation. By using transformations, the digital proof can live in the native data format to help prevent otherwise undetectable database drift over time.

This specification is designed to avoid requiring the duplication of signed information by utilizing "in-line" data transformations. Application developers are urged to work with cryptographically protected data in the native data format for their application and not separate storage of cryptographic proofs from the data being protected. Developers are also urged to regularly confirm that the cryptographically protected data has not been tampered with as it is written to and read from application storage.

Issue: Collision-resistant canonicalization requirements

The VCWG is seeking feedback on normative language that cryptographic suite implementers need to follow to ensure that they do not utilize data transformation mechanisms that can map to the same output. That is, given different inputs for canonicalization scheme #1 and canonicalization scheme #2, they must not produce the same output value. As an analogy, this is the same requirement for cryptographic hashing mechanisms and is why those schemes are designed to be collision resistant. Cryptographic canonicalization mechanisms have the same requirement. At present, this isn't a problem because the three expected canonicalization schemes — the Universal RDF Dataset Canonicalization Algorithm 2015 [RDF-CANON], JSON Canonicalization Scheme [RFC8785], and a theoretical future base-encoding canonicalization — have entirely different outputs.

Issue: Avoiding the pitfalls of XML Canonicalization

The VCWG is seeking feedback on whether to explain why modern canonicalization schemes are simpler than the far more complex XML Canonicalization schemes of the early 2000s. Some readers seem to be under the impression that all canonicalization is difficult and has to be avoided at all costs (including costs to application developers). The WG would like to understand if it would be helpful to include a section explaining why some simpler data syntaxes (such as JSON) are easier to canonicalize than more complex data syntaxes (such as XML).

5.5 Data Opacity

The inspectability of application data has effects on system efficiency and developer productivity. When cryptographically protected application data, such as base-encoded binary data, is not easily processed by application subsystems, such as databases, it increases the effort of working with the cryptographically protected information. For example, a cryptographically protected payload that can be natively stored and indexed by a database will result in a simpler system that:

Similarly, a cryptographically protected payload that can be processed by multiple upstream networked systems increases the ability to properly layer security architectures. For example, if upstream systems do not have to repeatedly decode the incoming payload, it increases the ability for a system to distribute processing load by specializing upstream subsystems to actively combat attacks. While a digital signature needs to always be checked before taking substantive action, other upstream checks can be performed on transparent payloads — such as identifier-based rate limiting, signature expiration checking, or nonce/challenge checking — to reject obviously bad requests.

Additionally, if a developer is not able to easily view data in a system, the ability to easily audit or debug system correctness is hampered. For example, requiring application developers to cut-and-paste base-encoded application data makes development more challenging and increases the chances that obvious bugs will be missed because every message needs to go through a manually operated base-decoding tool.

There are times, however, where the correct design decision is to make data opaque. Data that does not need to be processed by other application subsystems, as well as data that does not need to be modified or accessed by an application developer, can be serialized into opaque formats. Examples include digital signature values, cryptographic key parameters, and other data fields that only need to be accessed by a cryptographic library and need not be modified by the application developer. There are also examples where data opacity is appropriate when the underlying subsystem does not expose the application developer to the underlying complexity of the opaque data, such as databases that perform encryption at rest. In these cases, the application developer continues to develop against transparent application data formats while the database manages the complexity of encrypting and decrypting the application data to and from long-term storage.

This specification strives to provide an architecture where application data remains in its native format and is not made opaque, while other cryptographic data, such as digital signatures, are kept in their opaque binary encoded form. Cryptographic suite implementers are urged to consider appropriate use of data opacity when designing their suites, and to weigh the design trade-offs when making application data opaque versus providing access to cryptographic data at the application layer.

5.6 Verification Method Binding

Issue

Implementers must ensure that a verification method is bound to a particular controller by going from the verification method to the controller document, and then ensuring that the controller document also contains the verification method.

5.7 Verification Relationship Validation

When an implementation is verifying a proof, it is imperative that it verify not only that the verification method used to generate the proof is listed in the controller document, but also that it was intended to be used to generate the proof that is being verified. This process is known as "verification relationship validation".

The process for verification relationship validation is outlined in Section 4.3 Retrieve Verification Method.

This process is used to ensure that cryptographic material, such as a private cryptographic key, is not misused by application to an unintended purpose. An example of cryptographic material misuse would be if a private cryptographic key meant to be used to issue a Verifiable Credential was instead used to log into a website (that is, for authentication). Not checking a verification relationship is dangerous because the restriction and protection profile for some cryptographic material could be determined by its intended use. For example, some applications could be trusted to use cryptographic material for only one purpose, or some cryptographic material could be more protected, such as through storage in a hardware security module in a data center versus as an unencrypted file on a laptop.

5.8 Proof Purpose Validation

When an implementation is verifying a proof, it is imperative that it verify that the proof purpose match the intended use.

This process is used to ensure that proofs are not misused by an application for an unintended purpose, as this is dangerous for the proof creator. An example of misuse would be if a proof that stated its purpose was for securing assertions in verifiable credentials was instead used for authentication to log into a website. In this case, the proof creator attached proofs to any number of verifiable credentials that they expected to be distributed to an unbounded number of other parties. Any one of these parties could log into a website as the proof creator if the website erroneously accepted such a proof as authentication instead of its intended purpose.

5.9 Canonicalization Method Correctness

One of the algorithmic processes used by this specification is canonicalization, which is a type of transformation. Canonicalization is the process of taking information that might be expressed in a variety of semantically equivalent ways as input, and expressing all output in a single way, called a "canonical form".

The security of a resulting data integrity proof that utilizes canonicalization is highly dependent on the correctness of the algorithm. For example, if a canonicalization algorithm converts two inputs that have different meanings into the same output, then the author's intentions can be misrepresented to a verifier. This can be used as an attack vector by adversaries.

Additionally, if semantically relevant information in an input is not present in the output, then an attacker could insert such information into a message without causing proof verification to fail. This is similar to another transformation that is commonly used when cryptographically signing messages: cryptographic hashing. If an attacker is able to produce the same cryptographic hash from a different input, then the cryptographic hash algorithm is not considered secure.

Implementers are strongly urged to ensure proper vetting of any canonicalization algorithms to be used for transformation of input to a hashing process. Proper vetting includes, at a minimum, association with a peer reviewed mathematical proof of algorithm correctness; multiple implementations and vetting by experts in a standards setting organization is preferred. Implementers are strongly urged not to invent or use new mechanisms unless they have formal training in information canonicalization and/or access to experts in the field who are capable of producing a peer reviewed mathematical proof of algorithm correctness.

6. Privacy Considerations

The following section describes privacy considerations that developers implementing this specification should be aware of in order to create privacy enhancing software.

6.1 Unlinkability

When a digitally-signed payload contains data that is seen by multiple verifiers, it becomes a point of correlation. An example of such data is a shopping loyalty card number. Correlatable data can be used for tracking purposes by verifiers, which can sometimes violate privacy expectations. The fact that some data can be used for tracking might not be immediately apparent. Examples of such correlatable data include, but are not limited to, a static digital signature or a cryptographic hash of an image.

It is possible to create a digitally-signed payload that does not have any correlatable tracking data while also providing some level of assurance that the payload is trustworthy for a given interaction. This characteristic is called unlinkability which ensures that no correlatable data are used in a digitally-signed payload while still providing some level of trust, the sufficiency of which must be determined by each verifier.

It is important to understand that not all use cases require or even permit unlinkability. There are use cases where linkability and correlation are required due to regulatory or safety reasons, such as correlating organizations and individuals that are shipping and storing hazardous materials. Unlinkability is useful when there is an expectation of privacy for a particular interaction.

There are at least two mechanisms that can provide some level of unlinkability. The first method is to ensure that no data value used in the message is ever repeated in a future message. The second is to ensure that any repeated data value provides adequate herd privacy such that it becomes practically impossible to correlate the entity that expects some level of privacy in the interaction.

A variety of methods can be used to achieve unlinkability. These methods include ensuring that a message is a single use bearer token with no information that can be used for the purposes of correlation, using attributes that ensure an adequate level of herd privacy, and the use of cryptosuites that enable the entity presenting a message to regenerate new signatures while not compromising the trust in the message being presented.

6.2 Selective Disclosure

Selective disclosure is a technique that enables the recipient of a previously-signed message (that is, a message signed by its creator) to reveal only parts of the message without disturbing the verifiability of those parts. For example, one might selectively disclose a digital driver's license for the purpose of renting a car. This could involve revealing only the issuing authority, license number, birthday, and authorized motor vehicle class from the license. Note that in this case, the license number is correlatable information, but some amount of privacy is preserved because the driver's full name and address are not shared.

Not all software or cryptosuites are capable of providing selective disclosure. If the author of a message wishes it to be selectively disclosable by its recipient, then they need to enable selective disclosure on the specific message, and both need to use a capable cryptosuite. The author might also make it mandatory to disclose certain parts of the message. A recipient that wants to selectively disclose partial content of the message needs to utilize software that is able to perform the technique. An example of a cryptosuite that supports selective disclosure is bbs-2022.

It is possible to selectively disclose information in a way that does not preserve unlinkability. For example, one might want to disclose the inspection results related to a shipment, which include the shipment identifier or lot number, which might have to be correlatable due to regulatory requirements. However, disclosure of the entire inspection result might not be required as selectively disclosing just the pass/fail status could be deemed adequate. For more information on disclosing information while preserving privacy, see Section 6.1 Unlinkability.

A. References

A.1 Normative references

[INFRA]
Infra Standard. Anne van Kesteren; Domenic Denicola. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://infra.spec.whatwg.org/
[MULTIBASE]
The Multibase Data Format. Juan Benet; Manu Sporny. IETF. February 2023. Internet-Draft. URL: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-multiformats-multibase
[MULTICODEC]
The Multi Codec Encoding Scheme. The Multiformats Community. IETF. February 2022. Internet-Draft. URL: https://github.com/multiformats/multicodec/blob/master/table.csv
[RFC2119]
Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels. S. Bradner. IETF. March 1997. Best Current Practice. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2119
[RFC7517]
JSON Web Key (JWK). M. Jones. IETF. May 2015. Proposed Standard. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc7517
[RFC7638]
JSON Web Key (JWK) Thumbprint. M. Jones; N. Sakimura. IETF. September 2015. Proposed Standard. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc7638
[RFC8174]
Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words. B. Leiba. IETF. May 2017. Best Current Practice. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8174
[URL]
URL Standard. Anne van Kesteren. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://url.spec.whatwg.org/
[XMLSCHEMA11-2]
W3C XML Schema Definition Language (XSD) 1.1 Part 2: Datatypes. David Peterson; Sandy Gao; Ashok Malhotra; Michael Sperberg-McQueen; Henry Thompson; Paul V. Biron et al. W3C. 5 April 2012. W3C Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema11-2/

A.2 Informative references

[DI-ECDSA]
The Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm Cryptosuites v1.0. David Longley; Manu Sporny; Marty Reed. W3C Verifiable Credentials Working Group. W3C Working Draft. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/vc-di-ecdsa/
[DI-EDDSA]
The Edwards Digital Signature Algorithm Cryptosuites v1.0. David Longley; Manu Sporny; Dmitri Zagidulin. W3C Verifiable Credentials Working Group. W3C Working Draft. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/vc-di-eddsa/
[DID-CORE]
Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) v1.0. Manu Sporny; Amy Guy; Markus Sabadello; Drummond Reed. W3C. 19 July 2022. W3C Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/did-core/
[N-QUADS]
RDF 1.1 N-Quads. Gavin Carothers. W3C. 25 February 2014. W3C Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/n-quads/
[RDF-CANON]
RDF Dataset Canonicalization. Dave Longley; Gregg Kellogg; Dan Yamamoto. W3C. 12 July 2023. W3C Working Draft. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-canon/
[RFC3986]
Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax. T. Berners-Lee; R. Fielding; L. Masinter. IETF. January 2005. Internet Standard. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3986
[RFC7696]
Guidelines for Cryptographic Algorithm Agility and Selecting Mandatory-to-Implement Algorithms. R. Housley. IETF. November 2015. Best Current Practice. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc7696
[RFC8785]
JSON Canonicalization Scheme (JCS). A. Rundgren; B. Jordan; S. Erdtman. IETF. June 2020. Informational. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8785
[SECURITY-VOCABULARY]
The Security Vocabulary. Ivan Herman; Manu Sporny; David Longley. Verifiable Credentials Working Group. W3C Editor's Draft. URL: https://w3id.org/security
[VC-DATA-MODEL-2.0]
Verifiable Credentials Data Model v2.0. Manu Sporny; Orie Steele; Michael Jones; Gabe Cohen; Oliver Terbu. W3C. 12 July 2023. W3C Working Draft. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/vc-data-model-2.0/
[VC-SPECS]
Verifiable Credential Specifications Directory. Manu Sporny. W3C Verifiable Credentials Working Group. W3C Editor's Draft. URL: https://w3c.github.io/vc-specs-dir/
[ZCAP]
Authorization Capabilities for Linked Data. Credentials Community Group. CGDRAFT. URL: https://w3c-ccg.github.io/zcap-spec