Data Integrity BBS Cryptosuites v1.0

Achieving Unlinkable Data Integrity with Pairing-based Cryptography

W3C Working Draft

More details about this document
This version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/2024/WD-vc-di-bbs-20240314/
Latest published version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/vc-di-bbs/
Latest editor's draft:
https://w3c.github.io/vc-di-bbs/
History:
https://www.w3.org/standards/history/vc-di-bbs/
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Editors:
Greg Bernstein (Invited Expert)
Manu Sporny (Digital Bazaar)
Feedback:
GitHub w3c/vc-di-bbs (pull requests, new issue, open issues)

Abstract

This specification describes a Data Integrity Cryptosuite for use when generating digital signatures using the BBS signature scheme. The Signature Suite utilizes BBS signatures to provide selective disclosure and unlinkable derived 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 is an experimental specification and is undergoing regular revisions. It is not fit for production deployment.

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 03 November 2023 W3C Process Document.

1. Introduction

This specification defines a cryptographic suite for the purpose of creating, verifying, and deriving proofs using the BBS Signature Scheme in conformance with the Data Integrity [VC-DATA-INTEGRITY] specification. The BBS signature scheme directly provides for selective disclosure and unlinkable proofs. It provides four high-level functions that work within the issuer, holder, verifier model. Specifically, an issuer uses the BBS Sign function to create a cryptographic value known as a "BBS signature" which is used in signing the original credential. A holder, on receipt of a credential signed with BBS, then verifies the credential with the BBS Verify function.

The holder then chooses information to selectively disclose from the received credential and uses the BBS ProofGen function to generate a cryptographic value, known as a "BBS proof", which is used in creating a proof for this "derived credential". The cryptographic "BBS proof" value is not linkable to the original "BBS signature" and a different, unlinkable "BBS proof" can be generated by the holder for additional "derived credentials", including any containing the exact same information. Finally, a verifier uses the BBS ProofVerify function to verify the derived credential received from the holder.

Applying the BBS signature scheme to verifiable credentials involves the processing specified in this document. In general the suite uses the RDF Dataset Canonicalization Algorithm [RDF-CANON] to transform an input document into its canonical form. An issuer then uses selective disclosure primitives to separate the canonical form into mandatory and non-mandatory statements. These are processed separately with other information to serve as the inputs to the BBS Sign function along with appropriate key material. This output is used to generate a secured credential. A holder uses a set of selective disclosure functions and the BBS Verify function on receipt of the credential to ascertain validity.

Similarly, on receipt of a BBS signed credential, a holder uses the RDF Dataset Canonicalization Algorithm [RDF-CANON] to transform an input document into its canonical form, and then applies selective disclosure primitives to separate the canonical form into mandatory and selectively disclosed statements, which are appropriately processed and serve as inputs to the BBS ProofGen function. Suitably processed, the output of this function becomes the signed selectively disclosed credential sent to a verifier. Using canonicalization and selective disclosure primitives, the verifier can then use the BBS verifyProof function to validate the credential.

1.1 Terminology

Terminology used throughout this document is defined in the Terminology section of the Verifiable Credential Data Integrity 1.0 specification.

1.2 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, 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.

A conforming proof is any concrete expression of the data model that complies with the normative statements in this specification. Specifically, all relevant normative statements in Sections 2. Data Model and 3. Algorithms of this document MUST be enforced.

A conforming processor is any algorithm realized as software and/or hardware that generates or consumes a conforming proof. Conforming processors MUST produce errors when non-conforming documents are consumed.

This document contains examples of JSON and JSON-LD data. Some of these examples are invalid JSON, as they include features such as inline comments (//) explaining certain portions and ellipses (...) indicating the omission of information that is irrelevant to the example. Such parts need to be removed if implementers want to treat the examples as valid JSON or JSON-LD.

2. Data Model

The following sections outline the data model that is used by this specification for verification methods and data integrity proof formats.

2.1 Verification Methods

These verification methods are used to verify Data Integrity Proofs [VC-DATA-INTEGRITY] produced using BLS12-381 cryptographic key material that is compliant with [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE]. The encoding formats for these key types are provided in this section. Lossless cryptographic key transformation processes that result in equivalent cryptographic key material MAY be used during the processing of digital signatures.

2.1.1 Multikey

The Multikey format, as defined in [VC-DATA-INTEGRITY], is used to express public keys for the cryptographic suites defined in this specification.

The publicKeyMultibase property represents a Multibase-encoded Multikey expression of a BLS12-381 public key in the G2 group. The encoding of this field is the two-byte prefix 0xeb01 followed by the 96-byte compressed public key data. The 98-byte value is then encoded using base58-btc (z) as the prefix. Any other encodings MUST NOT be allowed.

Developers are advised to not accidentally publish a representation of a private key. Implementations of this specification will raise errors in the event of a [MULTICODEC] value other than 0xeb01 being used in a publicKeyMultibase value.

Example 1: A BLS12-381 G2 group public key, encoded as a Multikey
{
  "id": "https://example.com/issuer/123#key-0",
  "type": "Multikey",
  "controller": "https://example.com/issuer/123",
  "publicKeyMultibase": "zUC7EK3ZakmukHhuncwkbySmomv3FmrkmS36E4Ks5rsb6VQSRpoCrx6
  Hb8e2Nk6UvJFSdyw9NK1scFXJp21gNNYFjVWNgaqyGnkyhtagagCpQb5B7tagJu3HDbjQ8h
  5ypoHjwBb"
}
Example 2: A BLS12-381 G2 group public key, encoded as a Multikey in a controller document
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/did/v1",
    "https://w3id.org/security/data-integrity/v1"
  ],
  "id": "https://example.com/issuer/123",
  "verificationMethod": [{
    "id": "https://example.com/issuer/123#key-1",
    "type": "Multikey",
    "controller": "https://example.com/issuer/123",
    "publicKeyMultibase": "zUC7EK3ZakmukHhuncwkbySmomv3FmrkmS36E4Ks5rsb6VQSRpoCr
    x6Hb8e2Nk6UvJFSdyw9NK1scFXJp21gNNYFjVWNgaqyGnkyhtagagCpQb5B7tagJu3HDbjQ8h
    5ypoHjwBb"
  }]
}

2.2 Proof Representations

This suite relies on detached digital signatures represented using [MULTIBASE] and [MULTICODEC].

2.2.1 DataIntegrityProof

A proof contains the attributes specified in the Proofs section of [VC-DATA-INTEGRITY] with the following restrictions.

The verificationMethod property of the proof MUST be a URL. Dereferencing the verificationMethod MUST result in an object containing a type property with the value set to Multikey.

The type property of the proof MUST be DataIntegrityProof.

The cryptosuite property of the proof MUST be bbs-2023.

The value of the proofValue property of the proof MUST be a BBS signature or BBS proof produced according to [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE] that is serialized and encoded according to procedures in section 3. Algorithms.

3. Algorithms

The following algorithms describe how to use verifiable credentials with the BBS Signature Scheme [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE]. When using the BBS signature scheme the SHA-256 variant SHOULD be used.

Implementations SHOULD fetch and cache verification method information as early as possible when adding or verifying proofs. Parameters passed to functions in this section use information from the verification method — such as the public key size — to determine function parameters — such as the cryptographic hashing algorithm.

When the RDF Dataset Canonicalization Algorithm [RDF-CANON] is used, implementations of that algorithm will detect dataset poisoning by default, and abort processing upon detection.

3.1 Instantiate Cryptosuite

This algorithm is used to configure a cryptographic suite to be used by the Add Proof and Verify Proof functions in Verifiable Credential Data Integrity 1.0. The algorithm takes an options object (map options) as input and returns a cryptosuite instance (struct cryptosuite).

  1. Initialize cryptosuite to an empty struct.
  2. If options.type does not equal DataIntegrityProof, return cryptosuite.
  3. If options.cryptosuite is bbs-2023 then:
    1. Set cryptosuite.createProof to the algorithm in Section 3.4.1 Create Base Proof (bbs-2023).
    2. Set cryptosuite.verifyProof to the algorithm in Section 3.4.7 Verify Derived Proof (bbs-2023).
  4. Return cryptosuite.

3.2 Selective Disclosure Functions

3.2.1 createShuffledIdLabelMapFunction

The following algorithm creates a label map factory function that uses an HMAC to shuffle canonical blank node identifiers. The required input is an HMAC (previously initialized with a secret key), HMAC. A function, labelMapFactoryFunction, is produced as output.

  1. Create a function, labelMapFactoryFunction, with one required input (a canonical node identifier map, canonicalIdMap), that will return a blank node identifier map, bnodeIdMap, as output. Set the function's implementation to:
    1. Generate a new empty bnode identifier map, bnodeIdMap.
    2. For each map entry, entry, in canonicalIdMap:
      1. Perform an HMAC operation on the canonical identifier from the value in entry to get an HMAC digest, digest.
      2. Generate a new string value, b64urlDigest, and initialize it to "u" followed by appending a base64url-no-pad encoded version of the digest value.
      3. Add a new entry, newEntry, to bnodeIdMap using the key from entry and b64urlDigest as the value.
    3. Derive the shuffled mapping from the bnodeIdMap as follows:
      1. Set hmacIds to be the sorted array of values from the bnodeIdMap, and set bnodeKeys to be the ordered array of keys from the bnodeIdMap.
      2. For each key in bnodeKeys, replace the bnodeIdMap value for that key with the index position of the value in the hmacIds array prefixed by "b", i.e., bnodeIdMap.set(bkey, 'b' + hmacIds.indexOf(bnodeIdMap.get(bkey))).
    4. Return bnodeIdMap.
  2. Return labelMapFactoryFunction.
Note

It should be noted that step 1.2 in the above algorithm is identical to step 1.2 in Section 3.3.4 createHmacIdLabelMapFunction of [DI-ECDSA], so developers might be able to reuse the code or call the function if implementing both.

3.3 bbs-2023 Functions

3.3.1 serializeBaseProofValue

The following algorithm serializes the base proof value, including the BBS signature, HMAC key, and mandatory pointers. The required inputs are a base signature bbsSignature, an HMAC key hmacKey, and an array of mandatoryPointers. A single base proof string value is produced as output.

  1. Initialize a byte array, proofValue, that starts with the BBS base proof header bytes 0xd9, 0x5d, and 0x02.
  2. Initialize components to an array with five elements containing the values of: bbsSignature, bbsHeader, publicKey, hmacKey, and mandatoryPointers.
  3. CBOR-encode components per [RFC8949] where CBOR tagging MUST NOT be used on any of the components. Append the produced encoded value to proofValue.
  4. Initialize baseProof to a string with the multibase-base64url-no-pad-encoding of proofValue. That is, return a string starting with "u" and ending with the base64url-no-pad-encoded value of proofValue.
  5. Return baseProof as base proof.

3.3.2 parseBaseProofValue

The following algorithm parses the components of a bbs-2023 selective disclosure base proof value. The required input is a proof value (proofValue). A single object, parsed base proof, containing five or seven elements, using the names "bbsSignature", "bbsHeader", "publicKey", "hmacKey", "mandatoryPointers", and optional feature parameters "pid" and "signer_blind" is produced as output.

  1. Ensure the proofValue string starts with u (U+0075 LATIN SMALL LETTER U), indicating that it is a multibase-base64url-no-pad-encoded value, and throw an error if it does not.
  2. Initialize decodedProofValue to the result of base64url-no-pad-decoding the substring following the leading u in proofValue.
  3. Ensure that the decodedProofValue starts with the BBS base proof header bytes 0xd9, 0x5d, and 0x02, and throw an error if it does not.
  4. Initialize components to an array that is the result of CBOR-decoding the bytes that follow the three-byte BBS base proof header.
  5. Return an object with properties set to the following elements, using the names "bbsSignature", "bbsHeader", "publicKey", "hmacKey", "mandatoryPointers", (and optional feature parameters) "pid" and "signer_blind" respectively.

3.3.3 createDisclosureData

The following algorithm creates data to be used to generate a derived proof. The inputs include a JSON-LD document (document), a BBS base proof (proof), an array of JSON pointers to use to selectively disclose statements (selectivePointers), an OPTIONAL BBS presentationHeader (byte array that defaults to an empty byte array if not present), an OPTIONAL commitment_with_proof (a byte array), an OPTIONAL pid value (a byte array), and any custom JSON-LD API options (such as a document loader). A single object, disclosure data, is produced as output, which contains the bbsProof, labelMap, mandatoryIndexes, selectiveIndexes, presentationHeader, and revealDocument fields.

  1. Initialize bbsSignature, bbsHeader, publicKey, hmacKey, mandatoryPointers, and the optional feature parameters pid and signer_blind to the values of the associated properties in the object returned when calling the algorithm in Section 3.3.2 parseBaseProofValue, passing the proofValue from proof.
  2. Initialize hmac to an HMAC API using hmacKey. The HMAC uses the same hash algorithm used in the signature algorithm, i.e., SHA-256.
  3. Initialize labelMapFactoryFunction to the result of calling the createShuffledIdLabelMapFunction algorithm passing hmac as HMAC.
  4. Initialize combinedPointers to the concatenation of mandatoryPointers and selectivePointers.
  5. Initialize groupDefinitions to a map with the following entries: key of the string "mandatory" and value of mandatoryPointers; key of the string "selective" and value of selectivePointers; and key of the string "combined" and value of combinedPointers.
  6. Initialize groups and labelMap to the result of calling the algorithm in Section 3.3.16 canonicalizeAndGroup of the [DI-ECDSA] specification, passing document labelMapFactoryFunction, groupDefinitions, and any custom JSON-LD API options. Note: This step transforms the document into an array of canonical N-Quads whose order has been shuffled based on 'hmac' applied blank node identifiers, and groups the N-Quad strings according to selections based on JSON pointers.
  7. Compute the mandatory indexes relative to their positions in the combined statement list, i.e., find the position at which a mandatory statement occurs in the list of combined statements. One method for doing this is given below.
    1. Initialize mandatoryIndexes to an empty array. Set mandatoryMatch to groups.mandatory.matching map; set combinedMatch to groups.combined.matching; and set combinedIndexes to the ordered array of just the keys of the combinedMatch map.
    2. For each key in the mandatoryMatch map, find its index in the combinedIndexes array (e.g., combinedIndexes.indexOf(key)), and add this value to the mandatoryIndexes array.
  8. Compute the selective indexes relative to their positions in the non-mandatory statement list, i.e., find the position at which a selected statement occurs in the list of non-mandatory statements. One method for doing this is given below.
    1. Initialize selectiveIndexes to an empty array. Set selectiveMatch to the groups.selective.matching map; set mandatoryNonMatch to the map groups.mandatory.nonMatching; and nonMandatoryIndexes to to the ordered array of just the keys of the mandatoryNonMatch map.
    2. For each key in the selectiveMatch map, find its index in the nonMandatoryIndexes array (e.g., nonMandatoryIndexes.indexOf(key)), and add this value to the selectiveIndexes array.
  9. Initialize bbsMessages to an array of byte arrays containing the values in the nonMandatory array of strings encoded using the UTF-8 character encoding.
  10. Set bbsProof to the value computed by the appropriate procedure given below based on the values of the commitment_with_proof and pid options.
    1. If both commitment_with_proof and pid options are empty, set bbsProof to the value computed by the ProofGen procedure from [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE], i.e., ProofGen(PK, signature, header, ph, messages, disclosed_indexes), where PK is the original issuers public key, signature is the bbsSignature, header is the bbsHeader, ph is the presentationHeader messages is bbsMessages, and disclosed_indexes is selectiveIndexes.
    2. If commitment_with_proof is not empty and pid is empty, set bbsProof to the value computed by the ProofGen procedure from [CFRG-Blind-BBS-Signature], where PK is the original issuers public key, signature is the bbsSignature, header is the bbsHeader, ph is the presentationHeader messages is bbsMessages, disclosed_indexes is selectiveIndexes, commitment_with_proof, and signer_blind. The holder will also furnish its "secret value" that was used to compute the commitment_with_proof. This is the "anonymous holder binding" option.
    3. If pid is not empty, compute the pseudonym according to the procedures given in [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature], and set bbsProof to the value computed by the ProofGen procedure from [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature], where PK is the original issuers public key, signature is the bbsSignature, header is the bbsHeader, ph is the presentationHeader messages is bbsMessages, disclosed_indexes is selectiveIndexes, and pseudonym is the pseudonym. This is for both "pseudonym with issuer known pid" and "pseudonym with hidden pid" cases.
  11. Initialize revealDocument to the result of the "selectJsonLd" algorithm, passing document, and combinedPointers as pointers.
  12. Run the RDF Dataset Canonicalization Algorithm [RDF-CANON] on the joined combinedGroup.deskolemizedNQuads, passing any custom options, and get the canonical bnode identifier map, canonicalIdMap. Note: This map includes the canonical blank node identifiers that a verifier will produce when they canonicalize the reveal document.
  13. Initialize verifierLabelMap to an empty map. This map will map the canonical blank node identifiers produced by the verifier when they canonicalize the revealed document, to the blank node identifiers that were originally signed in the base proof.
  14. For each key (inputLabel) and value (verifierLabel) in `canonicalIdMap:
    1. Add an entry to verifierLabelMap, using verifierLabel as the key, and the value associated with inputLabel as a key in labelMap as the value.
  15. Return an object with properties matching bbsProof, "verifierLabelMap" for labelMap, mandatoryIndexes, selectiveIndexes, revealDocument, and pseudonym, if computed.

3.3.4 compressLabelMap

The following algorithm compresses a label map. The required input is label map (labelMap). The output is a compressed label map.

  1. Initialize map to an empty map.
  2. For each entry (k, v) in labelMap:
    1. Add an entry to map, with a key that is a base-10 integer parsed from the characters following the "c14n" prefix in k, and a value that is a base-10 integer parsed from the characters following the "b" prefix in v.
  3. Return map as compressed label map.

3.3.5 decompressLabelMap

The following algorithm decompresses a label map. The required input is a compressed label map (compressedLabelMap). The output is a decompressed label map.

  1. Initialize map to an empty map.
  2. For each entry (k, v) in compressedLabelMap:
    1. Add an entry to map, with a key that adds the prefix "c14n" to k, and a value that adds a prefix of "b" to v.
  3. Return map as decompressed label map.

3.3.6 serializeDerivedProofValue

The following algorithm serializes a derived proof value. The required inputs are a BBS proof (bbsProof), a label map (labelMap), an array of mandatory indexes (mandatoryIndexes), an array of selective indexes (selectiveIndexes), and a BBS presentation header (presentationHeader). Optional input is pseudonym. A single derived proof value, serialized as a byte string, is produced as output.

  1. Initialize compressedLabelMap to the result of calling the algorithm in Section 3.3.4 compressLabelMap, passing labelMap as the parameter.
  2. Initialize a byte array, proofValue, that starts with the BBS disclosure proof header bytes 0xd9, 0x5d, and 0x03.
  3. Initialize components to an array with elements containing the values of bbsProof, compressedLabelMap, mandatoryIndexes, selectiveIndexes, presentationHeader, and, if provided,pseudonym.
  4. CBOR-encode components per [RFC8949] where CBOR tagging MUST NOT be used on any of the components. Append the produced encoded value to proofValue.
  5. Return the derived proof as a string with the multibase-base64url-no-pad-encoding of proofValue. That is, return a string starting with "u" and ending with the base64url-no-pad-encoded value of proofValue.

3.3.7 parseDerivedProofValue

The following algorithm parses the components of the derived proof value. The required input is a derived proof value (proofValue). A single derived proof value object is produced as output, which contains a set of five or six elements, having the names bbsProof, labelMap, mandatoryIndexes, selectiveIndexes, presentationHeader, and the optional pseudonym parameter.

  1. Ensure the proofValue string starts with u (U+0075, LATIN SMALL LETTER U), indicating that it is a multibase-base64url-no-pad-encoded value, and throw an error if it does not.
  2. Initialize decodedProofValue to the result of base64url-no-pad-decoding the substring that follows the leading u in proofValue.
  3. Ensure that the decodedProofValue starts with the BBS disclosure proof header bytes 0xd9, 0x5d, and 0x03, and throw an error if it does not.
  4. Initialize components to an array that is the result of CBOR-decoding the bytes that follow the three-byte BBS disclosure proof header. Ensure the result is an array of five or six elements — a byte array, a map of integers to integers, an array of integers, another array of integers, and a byte array; otherwise, throw an error.
  5. Replace the second element in components using the result of calling the algorithm in Section 3.3.5 decompressLabelMap, passing the existing second element of components as compressedLabelMap.
  6. Return derived proof value as an object with properties set to the five elements, using the names bbsProof, labelMap, mandatoryIndexes, selectiveIndexes, presentationHeader, and optional pseudonym, respectively.

3.3.8 createVerifyData

The following algorithm creates the data needed to perform verification of a BBS-protected verifiable credential. The inputs include a JSON-LD document (document), a BBS disclosure proof (proof), and any custom JSON-LD API options (such as a document loader). A single verify data object value is produced as output containing the following fields: bbsProof, proofHash, mandatoryHash, selectedIndexes, presentationHeader, and nonMandatory.

  1. Initialize proofHash to the result of performing RDF Dataset Canonicalization [RDF-CANON] on the proof options, i.e., the proof portion of the document with the proofValue removed. The hash used is the same as that used in the signature algorithm, i.e., SHA-256. Note: This step can be performed in parallel; it only needs to be completed before this algorithm needs to use the proofHash value.
  2. Initialize bbsProof, labelMap, mandatoryIndexes, selectiveIndexes, presentationHeader, and pseudonym to the values associated with their property names in the object returned when calling the algorithm in Section 3.3.7 parseDerivedProofValue, passing proofValue from proof.
  3. Initialize labelMapFactoryFunction to the result of calling the "createLabelMapFunction" algorithm.
  4. Initialize nquads to the result of calling the "labelReplacementCanonicalize" algorithm of [DI-ECDSA], passing document, labelMapFactoryFunction, and any custom JSON-LD API options. Note: This step transforms the document into an array of canonical N-Quads with pseudorandom blank node identifiers based on labelMap.
  5. Initialize mandatory to an empty array.
  6. Initialize nonMandatory to an empty array.
  7. For each entry (index, nq) in nquads, separate the N-Quads into mandatory and non-mandatory categories:
    1. If mandatoryIndexes includes index, add nq to mandatory.
    2. Otherwise, add nq to nonMandatory.
  8. Initialize mandatoryHash to the result of calling the "hashMandatory" primitive, passing mandatory.
  9. Return an object with properties matching baseSignature, proofHash, nonMandatory, mandatoryHash, selectiveIndexes, and pseudonym.

3.4 bbs-2023

The bbs-2023 cryptographic suite takes an input document, canonicalizes the document using the Universal RDF Dataset Canonicalization Algorithm [RDF-CANON], and then applies a number of transformations and cryptographic operations resulting in the production of a data integrity proof. The algorithms in this section also include the verification of such a data integrity proof.

3.4.1 Create Base Proof (bbs-2023)

The following algorithm specifies how to create a data integrity proof given an unsecured data document. Required inputs are an unsecured data document (map unsecuredDocument), and a set of proof options (map options). A data integrity proof (map), or an error, is produced as output.

  1. Let proof be a clone of the proof options, options.
  2. Let proofConfig be the result of running the algorithm in Section 3.4.4 Base Proof Configuration (bbs-2023) with options passed as a parameter.
  3. Let transformedData be the result of running the algorithm in Section 3.4.2 Base Proof Transformation (bbs-2023) with unsecuredDocument, proofConfig, and options passed as parameters.
  4. Let hashData be the result of running the algorithm in Section 3.4.3 Base Proof Hashing (bbs-2023) with transformedData and proofConfig passed as a parameters.
  5. Let proofBytes be the result of running the algorithm in Section 3.4.5 Base Proof Serialization (bbs-2023) with hashData and options passed as parameters.
  6. Let proof.proofValue be a base64url-encoded Multibase value of the proofBytes.
  7. Return proof as the data integrity proof.

3.4.2 Base Proof Transformation (bbs-2023)

The following algorithm specifies how to transform an unsecured input document into a transformed document that is ready to be provided as input to the hashing algorithm in Section 3.4.3 Base Proof Hashing (bbs-2023).

Required inputs to this algorithm are an unsecured data document (unsecuredDocument) and transformation options (options). The transformation options MUST contain a type identifier for the cryptographic suite (type), a cryptosuite identifier (cryptosuite), and a verification method (verificationMethod). The transformation options MUST contain an array of mandatory JSON pointers (mandatoryPointers) and MAY contain additional options, such as a JSON-LD document loader. A transformed data document is produced as output. Whenever this algorithm encodes strings, it MUST use UTF-8 encoding.

  1. Initialize hmac to an HMAC API using a locally generated and exportable HMAC key. The HMAC uses the same hash algorithm used in the signature algorithm, i.e., SHA-256. Per the recommendations of [RFC2104], the HMAC key MUST be the same length as the digest size; for SHA-256, this is 256 bits or 32 bytes.
  2. Initialize labelMapFactoryFunction to the result of calling the createShuffledIdLabelMapFunction algorithm passing hmac as HMAC.
  3. Initialize groupDefinitions to a map with an entry with a key of the string "mandatory" and a value of mandatoryPointers.
  4. Initialize groups to the result of calling the algorithm in Section 3.3.16 canonicalizeAndGroup of the [DI-ECDSA] specification, passing labelMapFactoryFunction, groupDefinitions, unsecuredDocument as document, and any custom JSON-LD API options. Note: This step transforms the document into an array of canonical N-Quads whose order has been shuffled based on 'hmac' applied blank node identifiers, and groups the N-Quad strings according to selections based on JSON pointers.
  5. Initialize mandatory to the values in the groups.mandatory.matching map.
  6. Initialize nonMandatory to the values in the groups.mandatory.nonMatching map.
  7. Initialize hmacKey to the result of exporting the HMAC key from hmac.
  8. Return an object with "mandatoryPointers" set to mandatoryPointers, "mandatory" set to mandatory, "nonMandatory" set to nonMandatory, and "hmacKey" set to hmacKey.

3.4.3 Base Proof Hashing (bbs-2023)

The following algorithm specifies how to cryptographically hash a transformed data document and proof configuration into cryptographic hash data that is ready to be provided as input to the algorithms in Section 3.4.5 Base Proof Serialization (bbs-2023).

The required inputs to this algorithm are a transformed data document (transformedDocument) and canonical proof configuration (canonicalProofConfig). A hash data value represented as an object is produced as output.

  1. Initialize proofHash to the result of calling the RDF Dataset Canonicalization algorithm [RDF-CANON] on canonicalProofConfig and then cryptographically hashing the result using the same hash that is used by the signature algorithm, i.e., SHA-256. Note: This step can be performed in parallel; it only needs to be completed before this algorithm terminates, as the result is part of the return value.
  2. Initialize mandatoryHash to the result of calling the the algorithm in Section 3.3.17 hashMandatoryNQuads of the [DI-ECDSA] specification, passing transformedDocument.mandatory and using the SHA-256 algorithm.
  3. Initialize hashData as a deep copy of transformedDocument, and add proofHash as "proofHash" and mandatoryHash as "mandatoryHash" to that object.
  4. Return hashData as hash data.

3.4.4 Base Proof Configuration (bbs-2023)

The following algorithm specifies how to generate a proof configuration from a set of proof options that is used as input to the base proof hashing algorithm.

The required inputs to this algorithm are proof options (options). The proof options MUST contain a type identifier for the cryptographic suite (type) and MUST contain a cryptosuite identifier (cryptosuite). A proof configuration object is produced as output.

  1. Let proofConfig be a clone of the options object.
  2. If proofConfig.type is not set to DataIntegirtyProof and/or proofConfig.cryptosuite is not set to bbs-2023, an INVALID_PROOF_CONFIGURATION error MUST be raised.
  3. If proofConfig.created is set and if the value is not a valid [XMLSCHEMA11-2] datetime, an INVALID_PROOF_DATETIME error MUST be raised.
  4. Set proofConfig.@context to unsecuredDocument.@context.
  5. Let canonicalProofConfig be the result of applying the Universal RDF Dataset Canonicalization Algorithm [RDF-CANON] to the proofConfig.
  6. Return canonicalProofConfig.

3.4.5 Base Proof Serialization (bbs-2023)

The following algorithm, to be called by an issuer of a BBS-protected Verifiable Credential, specifies how to create a base proof. The base proof is to be given only to the holder, who is responsible for generating a derived proof from it, exposing only selectively disclosed details in the proof to a verifier. This algorithm is designed to be used in conjunction with the algorithms defined in the Data Integrity [VC-DATA-INTEGRITY] specification, Section 4: Algorithms. Required inputs are cryptographic hash data (hashData) and proof options (options). Optional inputs include a commitment_with_proof byte array and/or a use_pseudonyms boolean. The proof options MUST contain a type identifier for the cryptographic suite (type) and MAY contain a cryptosuite identifier (cryptosuite). A single digital proof value represented as series of bytes is produced as output.

  1. Initialize proofHash, mandatoryPointers, mandatoryHash, nonMandatory, and hmacKey to the values associated with their property names in hashData.
  2. Initialize bbsHeader to the concatenation of proofHash and mandatoryHash in that order.
  3. Initialize bbsMessages to an array of byte arrays containing the values in the nonMandatory array of strings encoded using the UTF-8 character encoding.
  4. Compute the bbsSignature using the procedures below, dependent on the values of commitment_with_proof and use_pseudonyms options.
    1. If commitment_with_proof is empty and use_pseudonyms is false, compute the bbsSignature using the Sign procedure of [CFRG-BBS-Signature], with appropriate key material, bbsHeader for the header, and bbsMessages for the messages.
    2. If commitment_with_proof is not empty and use_pseudonyms is false, compute the bbsSignature using the Sign procedure of [CFRG-Blind-BBS-Signature], with appropriate key material, bbsHeader for the header, and bbsMessages for the messages. If the signing procedure uses the optional signer_blind parameter, retain this value for use when calling 3.3.1 serializeBaseProofValue (below). This provides for the "anonymous holder binding" feature.
    3. If commitment_with_proof is empty and use_pseudonyms is true, generate a cryptographically random 32 byte pid value. Compute the bbsSignature using the Sign procedure of [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature], with appropriate key material, bbsHeader for the header, bbsMessages for the messages, and pid for the pid. Retain the pid value for use when calling 3.3.1 serializeBaseProofValue below. This provides for "pseudonym with issuer known pid".
    4. If commitment_with_proof is not empty and use_pseudonyms is true, compute the bbsSignature using the Sign procedure of [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature], with appropriate key material, bbsHeader for the header, bbsMessages for the messages, and commitment_with_proof for the commitment_with_proof. If the signing procedure uses the optional signer_blind parameter retain this value for use when calling 3.3.1 serializeBaseProofValue below. This provides for the "pseudonym with hidden pid" feature.
  5. Initialize `proofValue to the result of calling the algorithm in Section 3.3.1 serializeBaseProofValue, passing bbsSignature, bbsHeader, publicKey, hmacKey, mandatoryPointers, pid, and signer_blind values as paramters. Use empty byte arrays for pid and signer_blind if they are not used. Note publicKey is a byte array of the public key, encoded according to [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE].
  6. Return proofValue as digital proof.

3.4.6 Add Derived Proof (bbs-2023)

The following algorithm, to be called by a holder of a bbs-2023-protected verifiable credential, creates a selective disclosure derived proof. The derived proof is to be given to the verifier. The inputs include a JSON-LD document (document), a BBS base proof (proof), an array of JSON pointers to use to selectively disclose statements (selectivePointers), an OPTIONAL BBS presentationHeader (a byte array), an OPTIONAL commitment_with_proof (a byte array), an OPTIONAL pid value (a byte array), and any custom JSON-LD API options, such as a document loader. A single selectively revealed document value, represented as an object, is produced as output.

  1. Initialize bbsProof, labelMap, mandatoryIndexes, selectiveIndexes, and revealDocument to the values associated with their property names in the object returned when calling the algorithm in Section 3.3.3 createDisclosureData, passing the document, proof, selectivePointers, presentationHeader, and any custom JSON-LD API options, such as a document loader.
  2. Initialize newProof to a shallow copy of proof.
  3. Replace proofValue in newProof with the result of calling the algorithm in Section 3.3.6 serializeDerivedProofValue, passing bbsProof, labelMap, mandatoryIndexes, selectiveIndexes, commitment_with_proof, and pid.
  4. Set the value of the "proof" property in revealDocument to newProof.
  5. Return revealDocument as the selectively revealed document.

3.4.7 Verify Derived Proof (bbs-2023)

The following algorithm specifies how to verify a data integrity proof given an secured data document. Required inputs are a secured data document (map securedDocument). This algorithm returns a verification result, which is a struct whose items are:

verified
true or false
verifiedDocument
Null, if verified is false; otherwise, an unsecured data document

To verify a derived proof, perform the following steps:

  1. Let unsecuredDocument be a copy of securedDocument with the proof value removed.
  2. Let proofConfig be a copy of securedDocument.proof with proofValue removed.
  3. Let proof be the value of securedDocument.proof.
  4. Initialize bbsProof, proofHash, mandatoryHash, selectedIndexes, presentationHeader, pseudonym, and nonMandatory to the values associated with their property names in the object returned when calling the algorithm in Section 3.3.8 createVerifyData, passing the unsecuredDocument, proof, and any custom JSON-LD API options (such as a document loader).
  5. Initialize bbsHeader to the concatenation of proofHash and mandatoryHash in that order. Initialize disclosedMessages to an array of byte arrays obtained from the UTF-8 encoding of the elements of the nonMandatory array.
  6. Initialize verified to the result of applying the verification algorithm below, depending on whether the pseudonym value is empty.
    1. If the pseudonym value is empty, initialize verified to the result of applying the verification algorithm ProofVerify(PK, proof, header, ph, disclosed_messages, disclosed_indexes) of [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE] with PK set as the public key of the original issuer, proof set as bbsProof, header set as bbsHeader, disclosed_messages set as disclosedMessages, ph set as presentationHeader, and disclosed_indexes set as selectiveIndexes. This applies to the regular BBS proof case as well as "anonymous holder binding" case.
    2. If the pseudonym value is not empty, initialize verified to the result of applying the verification algorithm PseudonymProofVerify(PK, proof, header, ph, disclosed_messages, disclosed_indexes, pseudonym) of [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature], with PK set as the public key of the original issuer, proof set as bbsProof, header set as bbsHeader, disclosed_messages set as disclosedMessages, ph set as presentationHeader, disclosed_indexes set as selectiveIndexes, and pseudonym. This applies to the "pseudonym with issuer known pid" and "pseudonym with hidden pid" cases.
  7. Return a verification result with items:
    verified
    verified
    verifiedDocument
    unsecuredDocument if verified is true, otherwise Null

4. Optional Features

This section is non-normative.

The cryptographic properties of BBS signatures permit variants that can support advanced functionalities. This specification is limited to supporting only the most relevant of these enhancements, which we explain in the following sections. The variables commitment_with_proof, use_pseudonyms, pid, and pseudonym are associated with these features and are not otherwise needed for BBS signatures and proofs.

Issue 1: Optional BBS features are at risk

The optional BBS features described in this section, and included in the algorithms in this specification, are at risk and will be removed before the finalization of this specification if their respective specifications at the IETF do not reach RFC status on the same timeline or if there are not at least two independent implementations for each optional feature.

4.1 Anonymous Holder Binding

This feature binds, at the time of issuance, a document with base proof, to a secret, known only to a holder, in such a way, that only that holder can generate a revealed document with derived proof that will verify. For example, if an adversary obtained the document with base proof, they could not create a revealed document with derived proof that can verify.

To provide for this functionality, a holder generates a holder_secret value which should generally be at least 32 bytes long and cryptographically randomly generated. This value is never shared by the holder. Instead, the holder generates a commitment along with a zero knowledge proof of knowledge of this value, using the "Commitment Generation" procedure of [CFRG-Blind-BBS-Signature]. This computation involves cryptographically random values and computes the commitment_with_proof and secret_prover_blind values. The commitment_with_proof is conveyed to the issuer while the secret_prover_blind is kept secret and is retained by the holder for use in generation of derived proofs. Note that a holder can run the "Commitment Generation" procedure multiple times to produce unlinkable commitment_with_proof values for use with different issuers.

The issuer, on receipt of the commitment_with_proof, follows the procedures of [CFRG-Blind-BBS-Signature] to produce a base proof (signature) over the document with the commitment furnished by the holder. If the issuer chooses to use the signer_blind parameter when creating the signature in [CFRG-Blind-BBS-Signature], this value needs to be conveyed to the holder as part of the base proof value.

When the holder wants to create a selectively disclosed document with derived proof, they use their holder_secret (as a "commited message"), the secret_prover_blind, and, if supplied in the base proof, the signer_blind in the proof generation procedure of [CFRG-Blind-BBS-Signature].

Verification of the revealed document with derived proof uses the "regular" BBS proof verification procedures of [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE].

4.2 Pseudonyms with Issuer-known PID

This feature is a privacy preserving enhancement that allows a verifier that has seen a selectively revealed document with derived proof from a holder to recognize that the same holder is presenting a new selectively revealed document with derived proof. Note that this may just be a new unlinkable proof (derived proof) on the same selectively revealed information. By "privacy preserving," we mean that no uniquely identifiable information is added that would allow tracking between different verifiers that may share information amongst themselves. This variant does allow for the issuer to monitor usage if verifiers share information with the issuer.

To furnish this capability, before creating the base proof for a document, an issuer generates a value known as a pid (prover id) which should be cryptographically random and at least 32 bytes long. This value is shared with the holder but otherwise kept secret. This value is then used in creating the base proof via the signing procedure in [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature].

The holder receives the document with base proof which includes the pid value from the issuer. The holder obtains a verifier_id associated with the verifier for which they intend to create a revealed document with derived proof. Using the procedures of [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature], a cryptographic pseudonym value is generated. The derived proof value is generated via the proof generation procedure of [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature], and this value along with the pseudonym are given to the verifier. Note that the pid value cannot be recovered from the pseudonym.

When the verifier receives the revealed document with derived proof and pseudonym, they use the proof verification procedures of [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature].

4.3 Pseudonyms with Hidden PID

This feature is a privacy preserving enhancement that allows a verifier that has seen a selectively revealed document with derived proof from a holder to recognize that the same holder is presenting a new selectively revealed document with derived proof. Note that this may just be a new unlinkable proof (derived proof) on the same selectively revealed information. By "privacy preserving," we mean that no uniquely identifiable information is added that would allow tracking between different verifiers that may share information amongst themselves and/or with the issuer.

To provide for this capability, a holder needs to generate a secret pid value that should be at least 32 bytes long and generated in cryptographically random manner. The holder then uses the "Commitment Generation" procedure of [CFRG-Blind-BBS-Signature] to generate a commitment_with_proof value and a private secret_prover_blind value. This value needs to be conveyed to the issuer who will use it in the issuance of a document with base proof, in accordance with [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature], which is sent to the holder. The pid value is never shared by the holder. If the issuer chooses to use the optional signer_blind parameter when creating the signature in this value needs to be conveyed to the holder as part of the base proof value.

The holder obtains a verifier_id associated with the verifier for which they intend to create a revealed document with derived proof. Using the procedures of [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature], a cryptographic pseudonym value is generated from their pid value and the verifier_id. The derived proof value is generated via the proof generation using the pid, secret_prover_blind, verifier_id, and signer_blind using the procedures of [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature], and this value is given to the verifier along with the pseudonym. Note that the pid value cannot be recovered from the pseudonym.

When the verifier receives the revealed document with derived proof and pseudonym, they use the proof verification procedures of [CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature].

5. Security Considerations

Before reading this section, readers are urged to familiarize themselves with general security advice provided in the Security Considerations section of the Data Integrity specification.

5.1 Base Proof Security Properties

This section is non-normative.

The security of the base proof is dependent on the security properties of the associated BBS signature. Digital signatures might exhibit a number of desirable cryptographic properties [Taming_EdDSAs] among these are:

EUF-CMA (existential unforgeability under chosen message attacks) is usually the minimal security property required of a signature scheme. It guarantees that any efficient adversary who has the public key p k of the signer and received an arbitrary number of signatures on messages of its choice (in an adaptive manner): { m i , σ i } i = 1 N , cannot output a valid signature σ for a new message m { m i } i = 1 N (except with negligible probability). In case the attacker outputs a valid signature on a new message: ( m , σ ) , it is called an existential forgery.

SUF-CMA (strong unforgeability under chosen message attacks) is a stronger notion than EUF-CMA. It guarantees that for any efficient adversary who has the public key p k of the signer and received an arbitrary number of signatures on messages of its choice: { m i , σ i } i = 1 N , it cannot output a new valid signature pair ( m , σ ) , such that ( m , σ ) { m i , σ i } i = 1 N (except with negligible probability). Strong unforgeability implies that an adversary cannot only sign new messages, but also cannot find a new signature on an old message.

In [CDL2016] under some reasonable assumptions BBS signatures were proven to be EUF-CMA. Furthermore, in [TZ2023], under similar assumptions BBS signatures were proven to be SUF-CMA. In both cases the assumptions are related to the hardness of the discrete logarithm problem which is not considered post large scale quantum computing secure.

Under non-quantum computing conditions [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE] provides additional security guidelines to BBS signature suite implementors. Further security considerations related to pairing friendly curves are discussed in [CFRG-PAIRING-FRIENDLY].

5.2 Derived Proof Security Properties

This section is non-normative.

The security of the derived proof is dependent on the security properties of the associated BBS proof. Both [CDL2016] and [TZ2023] prove that a BBS proof is a zero knowledge proof of knowledge of a BBS signature.

As explained in [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE] this means:

a verifying party in receipt of a proof is unable to determine which signature was used to generate the proof, removing a common source of correlation. In general, each proof generated is indistinguishable from random even for two proofs generated from the same signature.

and

The proofs generated by the scheme prove to a verifier that the party who generated the proof (holder/prover or an agent of theirs) was in possession of a signature without revealing it.

More precisely, verification of a BBS proof requires the original issuers public key as well as the unaltered, revealed BBS message in the proper order.

6. Privacy Considerations

This section is non-normative.

6.1 Selective Disclosure and Data Leakage

Selective disclosure permits a holder to minimize the information revealed to a verifier to achieve a particular purpose. In prescribing an overall system that enables selective disclosure, care has to be taken that additional information that was not meant to be disclosed to the verifier is minimized. Such leakage can occur through artifacts of the system. Such artifacts can come from higher layers of the system, such as in the structure of data or from the lower level cryptographic primitives.

For example the BBS signature scheme is an extremely space efficient scheme for producing a signature on multiple messages, i.e., the cryptographic signature sent to the holder is a constant size regardless of the number of messages. The holder then can selectively disclose any of these messages to a verifier, however as part of the encryption scheme, the total number of messages signed by the issuer has to be revealed to the verifier. If such information leakage needs to be avoided then it is recommended to pad the number of messages out to a common length as suggested in the privacy considerations section of [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE].

At the higher levels, how data gets mapped into individual statements suitable for selective disclosure, i.e., BBS messages, is a potential source of data leakage. This cryptographic suite is able to eliminate many structural artifacts used to express JSON data that might leak information (nesting, map, or array position, etc.) by using JSON-LD processing to transform inputs into RDF. RDF can then be expressed as a canonical, flat format of simple subject, property, value statements (referred to as claims in the Verifiable Credentials Data Model [VC-DATA-MODEL-2.0]). In the following, we examine RDF canonicalization, a general scheme for mapping a verifiable credential in JSON-LD format into a set of statements (BBS messages), for selective disclosure. We show that after this process is performed, there remains a possible source of information leakage, and we show how this leakage is mitigated via the use of a keyed pseudo random function (PRF).

RDF canonicalization can be used to flatten a JSON-LD VC into a set of statements. The algorithm is dependent on the content of the VC and also employs a cryptographic hash function to help in ordering the statements. In essence, how this happens is that each JSON object that represents the subject of claims within a JSON-LD document will be assigned an id, if it doesn't have an @id field defined. Such ids are known as blank node ids. These ids are needed to express claims as simple subject, property, value statements such that the subject in each claim can be differentiated. The id values are deterministically set per [RDF-CANON] and are based on the data in the document and the output of a cryptographic hash function such as SHA-256.

Below we show two slightly different VCs for a set of windsurf sails and their canonicalization into a set of statements that can be used for selective disclosure. By changing the year of the 6.1 size sail we see a major change in statement ordering between these two VCs. If the holder discloses information about just his larger sails (the 7.0 and 7.8) the verifier could tell something changed about the set of sails, i.e., information leakage.

Example 3: A VC for a set of windsurfing sails
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/credentials/v2",
    {
      "@vocab": "https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#"
    }
  ],
  "type": [
    "VerifiableCredential"
  ],
  "credentialSubject": {
    "sails": [
      {
        "size": 5.5,
        "sailName": "Kihei",
        "year": 2023
      },
      {
        "size": 6.1,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2023 // Will change this to see the effect on canonicalization
      },
      {
        "size": 7.0,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2020
      },
      {
        "size": 7.8,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2023
      }
    ]
  }
}

Canonical form of the above VC. Assignment of blank node ids, i.e., the _:c14nX labels are dependent upon the content of the VC and this also affects the ordering of the statements.

Example 4: Canonical form of the VC for a set of windsurfing sails
_:c14n0 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> "Lahaina" .
_:c14n0 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> "7.8E0"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .
_:c14n0 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> "2023"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .
_:c14n1 <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type> <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#VerifiableCredential> .
_:c14n1 <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#credentialSubject> _:c14n4 .
_:c14n2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> "Lahaina" .
_:c14n2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> "7"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .
_:c14n2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> "2020"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .
_:c14n3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> "Kihei" .
_:c14n3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> "5.5E0"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .
_:c14n3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> "2023"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .
_:c14n4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n0 .
_:c14n4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n2 .
_:c14n4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n3 .
_:c14n4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n5 .
_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> "Lahaina" .
_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> "6.1E0"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .
_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> "2023"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .

Updated windsurf sail collection, i.e., the 6.1 size sail has been updated to the 2024 model. This changes the ordering of statements via the assignment of blank node ids.

Example 5: A VC for a slightly updated set of windsurfing sails
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/credentials/v2",
    {
      "@vocab": "https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#"
    }
  ],
  "type": [
    "VerifiableCredential"
  ],
  "credentialSubject": {
    "sails": [
      {
        "size": 5.5,
        "sailName": "Kihei",
        "year": 2023
      },
      {
        "size": 6.1,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2024 // New sail to update older model, changes canonicalization
      },
      {
        "size": 7.0,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2020
      },
      {
        "size": 7.8,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2023
      }
    ]
  }
}

Canonical form of the previous VC. Note the difference in blank node id assignment and ordering of statements.

Example 6: Canonical form of the updated VC for a set of windsurfing sails
_:c14n0 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> "Lahaina" .
_:c14n0 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> "6.1E0"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .
_:c14n0 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> "2024"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .
_:c14n1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> "Lahaina" .
_:c14n1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> "7.8E0"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .
_:c14n1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> "2023"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .
_:c14n2 <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type> <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#VerifiableCredential> .
_:c14n2 <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#credentialSubject> _:c14n5 .
_:c14n3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> "Lahaina" .
_:c14n3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> "7"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .
_:c14n3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> "2020"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .
_:c14n4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> "Kihei" .
_:c14n4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> "5.5E0"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .
_:c14n4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> "2023"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .
_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n0 .
_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n1 .
_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n3 .
_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n4 .

To prevent such information leakage from the assignment of these blank node ids and the ordering they impose on the statements, an HMAC based PRF is run on the blank node ids. The HMAC secret key is only shared between the issuer and holder and each Base Proof generated by the issuer uses a new HMAC key. An example of this can be seen in the canonical HMAC test vector of [DI-ECDSA]. As discussed in the next section, for BBS to preserve unlinkability we do not use HMAC based blank node ids but produce a shuffled version of the ordering based on the HMAC as shown in test vector Example 12. Note that this furnishes less information hiding concerning blank node ids than in the ECDSA-SD approach, since information the number of blank node ids can leak, but prevents linkage attacks via the essentially unique identifiers produced by applying an HMAC to blank node ids.

6.2 Selective Disclosure and Unlinkability

In some uses of VCs it can be important to the privacy of a holder to prevent the tracking or linking of multiple different verifier interactions. In particular we consider two important cases (i) verifier to issuer collusion, and (ii) verifier to verifier collusion. In the first case, shown in Figure 1, a verifier reports back to the original issuer of the credential on an interaction with a holder. In this situation, the issuer could track all the holder interactions with various verifiers using the issued VC. In the second situation, shown in Figure 2, multiple verifiers collude to share information about holders with whom they have interacted.


Diagram showing multiple verifiers sending data back to the issuer.
The diagram is laid out top to bottom with a circle labeled issuer at the top,
connected to a circle label holder below. From the circle labeled holder there
are multple arrows to additional circles labeled verifiers. From the circles
labeled verifiers there are dashed arrows back to the circle labeled issuer
showing collusion data flow.
Figure 1 Verifier to verifier collusion.

Diagram showing multiple verifiers sharing with each other.
The diagram is laid out top to bottom with a circle labeled issuer at the top,
connected to a circle label holder below. From the circle labeled holder there
are multple arrows to additional circles labeled verifiers. From the circles
labeled verifiers there are dashed arrows back to other circles labeled issuer
to show verifier to verifier collusion data flows.
Figure 2 Verifier to issuer collusion.

We use the term unlinkability to describe the property of a VC system to prevent such "linkage attacks" on holder privacy. Although the term unlinkability is relatively new section 3.3 of [NISTIR8053] discusses and gives a case study of Re-identification through Linkage Attacks. A systemization of knowledge on linkage attack on data privacy can be found in [Powar2023]. The most widespread use of linkage attack on user privacy occurs via the practice of web browser fingerprinting, a survey of which can be found in [Pugliese2020].

To quantify the notion of linkage, [Powar2023] introduces the idea of an anonymity set. In the VC case we are concerned with here, the anonymity set would contain the holder of a particular VC and other holders associated with a particular issuer. The smaller the anonymity set the more likely the holder can be tracked across verifiers. Since a signed VC contains a reference to a public key of the issuer, the starting size for the anonymity set for a holder possessing a VC from a particular issuer is the number of VC issued by that issuer with that particular public/private key pair. Non-malicious issuers are expected to minimize the number of public/private key pairs used to issue VCs. Note that the anonymity set idea is similar to the group privacy concept in [vc-bitstring-status-list]. When we use the term linkage here we generally mean any mechanism that results in a reduction in size of the anonymity set.

Sources of linkage in a VC system supporting selective disclosure:

  1. Artifacts from cryptographic primitives.
  2. Artifacts from mapping a VC into a set of statements suitable for selective disclosure.
  3. Artifacts from Proof Options and Mandatory reveal Information in the VC.
  4. Selectively revealed information in the VC.
  5. External VC System Based Linkage

We discuss each of these below.

6.2.1 Linkage via Cryptographic Artifacts

Cryptographic Hashes, HMACs, and digital signatures by their nature generate highly unique identifiers. The output of a hash function such as SHA-256, by its collision resistance properties, are guaranteed to be essentially unique given different inputs and result in a strong linkage, i.e., reduces the anonymity set size to one. Similarly deterministic signature algorithms such as Ed25519 and deterministic ECDSA will produce essentially unique outputs for different inputs and lead to strong linkages.

This implies that holders can be easily tracked across verifiers via digital signature, HMAC, or hash artifacts inside VCs and hence are vulnerable to verifier-verifier collusion and verifier-issuer collusion. Randomized signature algorithms such as some forms of ECDSA can permit the issuer to generate many distinct signatures on the same inputs and send these to the holder for use with different verifiers. Such an approach could be used to prevent verifier-verifier collusion based tracking but cannot help with verifier-issuer collusion.

To achieve unlinkability requires specially designed cryptographic signature schemes that allow the holder to generate what is called a zero knowledge proof of knowledge of a signature (ZKPKS). What this means is that the holder can take a signature from the issuer in such a scheme, compute a ZKPKS to send to a verifier. This ZKPKS cannot be linked back to the original signature, but has all the desirable properties of a signature, i.e., the verifier can use it to verify that the messages were signed by the issuers public key and that the messages have not been altered. In addition, the holder can generate as many ZKPKSs as desired for different verifiers and these are essentially independent and unlinkable. BBS is one such signature scheme that supports this capability.

Although the ZKPKS, known as a BBS proof in this document, has guaranteed unlinkability properties. BBS when used with selective disclosure has two artifacts that can contribute to linkability. These are the total number of messages originally signed, and the index values for the revealed statements. See the privacy considerations in [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE] for a discussion and mitigation techniques.

As mentioned in the section on Issuer's Public Keys of [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE] there is the potential threat that an issuer might use multiple public keys with some of those used to track a specific subset of users via verifier-issuer collusion. Since the issuers public key has to be visible to the verifier, i.e., it is referenced in the BBS proof (derived proof) this can be used as a linkage point if the issuer has many different public keys and particularly if it uses a subset of those keys with a small subset of users (holders).

6.2.2 Linkage via VC Processing

We saw in the section on information leakage that RDF canonicalization uses a hash function to order statements and that a further shuffle of the order of the statements is performed based on an HMAC. This can leave a fingerprint that might allow for some linkage. How strong of a linkage is dependent on the number of blank nodes, essentially JSON objects within the VC, and the number of indexes revealed. Given n blank nodes and k disclosed indexes in the worst case this would be a reduction in the anonymity set size by a factor of C(n, k), i.e., the number combinations of size k chosen from a set of n elements. One can keep this number quite low by reducing the number of blank nodes in the VC, e.g., keep the VC short and simple.

6.2.3 Linkage via JSON-LD Node Identifiers

JSON-LD is a JSON-based format for serialization of Linked Data. As such, it supports assigning a globally unambiguous @id attribute (node identifier) to each object ("node", in JSON-LD terminology) within a document. This allows for the linking of linked data, enabling information about the same entity to be correlated. This correlation can be desirable or undesirable, depending on the use case.

When using BBS for its unlinkability feature, globally unambiguous node identifiers cannot be used for individuals nor for their personally identifiable information, since the strong linkage they provide is undesirable. Note that the use of such identifiers is acceptable when expressing statements about non-personal information (e.g., using a globally unambiguous identifier to identify a large country or a concert event). Also note that JSON-LD's use of @context, which maps terms to IRIs, does not generally affect unlinkability.

6.2.4 Linkage via Proof Options and Mandatory Reveal

In the [vc-data-integrity] specification, a number of properties of the proof attribute of a VC are given. Care has to be taken that optional fields ought not provide strong linkage across verifiers. The optional fields include: id, created, expires, domain, challenge, and nonce. For example the optional created field is a dateTimeStamp object which can specify the creation date for the proof down to an arbitrary sub-second granularity. Such information, if present, could greatly reduce the size of the anonymity set. If the issuer wants to include such information they ought to make it as coarse grained as possible, relative to the number of VCs being issued over time.

The issuer can also compel a holder to reveal certain statements to a verifier via the mandatoryPointers input used in the creation of the Base Proof. See section 3.4.2 Base Proof Transformation (bbs-2023), Example 9, and Example 10. By compel we mean that a generated Derived Proof will not verify unless these statements are revealed to the verifier. Care should be taken such that if such information is required to be disclosed, that the anonymity set remains sufficiently large.

6.2.5 Linkage via Holder Selective Reveal

As discussed in [Powar2023] there are many documented cases of re-identification of individuals from linkage attacks. Hence the holder is urged to reveal as little information as possible to help keep the anonymity set large. In addition, it has been shown a number of times that innocuous seeming information can be highly unique and thus leading to re-identification or tracking. See [NISTIR8053] for a walk through of a particularly famous case of a former governor of Massachusetts and [Powar2023] for further analysis and categorization of 94 such public cases.

6.2.6 External VC System Based Linkage

It ought to be pointed out that maintaining unlinkability, i.e., anonymity, requires care in the systems holding and communicating the VCs. Networking artifacts such as IP address (layer 3) or Ethernet/MAC address (layer 2) are well known sources of linkage. For example, mobile phone MAC addresses can be used to track users if they revisited a particular access point, this led to mobile phone manufacturers providing a MAC address randomization feature. Public IP addresses generally provide enough information to geolocate an individual to a city or region within a country potentially greatly reducing the anonymity set.

A. Test Vectors

This section is non-normative.

Demonstration of selective disclosure features including mandatory disclosure, selective disclosure, and overlap between those, requires an input credential document with more content than previous test vectors. To avoid excessively long test vectors, the starting document test vector is based on a purely fictitious windsurfing (sailing) competition scenario. In addition, we break the test vectors into two groups, based on those that would be generated by the issuer (base proof) and those that would be generated by the holder (derived proof).

A.1 Base Proof

To add a selective disclosure base proof to a document, the issuer needs the following cryptographic key material:

  1. The issuer's private/public key pair, i.e., the key pair corresponding to the verification method that will be part of the proof.
  2. An HMAC key. This is used to randomize the order of the blank node IDs to avoid potential information leakage via the blank node ID ordering. This is used only once, and is shared between issuer and holder. The HMAC in this case is functioning as a pseudorandom function (PRF).

The key material used for generating the test vectors to test add base proof is shown below. Hexadecimal representation is used for the BBS key pairs and the HMAC key.

Example 7: Private and Public keys for Signature
{
  "publicKeyHex": "a4ef1afa3da575496f122b9b78b8c24761531a8a093206ae7c45b80759c168ba4f7a260f9c3367b6c019b4677841104b10665edbe70ba3ebe7d9cfbffbf71eb016f70abfbb163317f372697dc63efd21fc55764f63926a8f02eaea325a2a888f",
  "privateKeyHex": "66d36e118832af4c5e28b2dfe1b9577857e57b042a33e06bdea37b811ed09ee0",
  "hmacKeyString": "00112233445566778899AABBCCDDEEFF00112233445566778899AABBCCDDEEFF"
}

In our scenario, a sailor is registering with a race organizer for a series of windsurfing races to be held over a number of days on Maui. The organizer will inspect the sailor's equipment to certify that what has been declared is accurate. The sailor's unsigned equipment inventory is shown below.

Example 8: Credential without Proof
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/credentials/v2",
    {
      "@vocab": "https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#"
    }
  ],
  "type": [
    "VerifiableCredential"
  ],
  "issuer": "https://vc.example/windsurf/racecommittee",
  "credentialSubject": {
    "sailNumber": "Earth101",
    "sails": [
      {
        "size": 5.5,
        "sailName": "Kihei",
        "year": 2023
      },
      {
        "size": 6.1,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2023
      },
      {
        "size": 7.0,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2020
      },
      {
        "size": 7.8,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2023
      }
    ],
    "boards": [
      {
        "boardName": "CompFoil170",
        "brand": "Wailea",
        "year": 2022
      },
      {
        "boardName": "Kanaha Custom",
        "brand": "Wailea",
        "year": 2019
      }
    ]
  }
}

In addition to letting other sailors know what kinds of equipment their competitors may be sailing on, it is mandatory that each sailor disclose the year of their most recent windsurfing board and full details on two of their sails. Note that all sailors are identified by a sail number that is printed on all their equipment. This mandatory information is specified via an array of JSON pointers as shown below.

Example 9: Mandatory Pointers
["/issuer", "/credentialSubject/sailNumber", "/credentialSubject/sails/1", "/credentialSubject/boards/0/year", "/credentialSubject/sails/2"]

The result of applying the above JSON pointers to the sailor's equipment document is shown below.

Example 10: JSON Pointers and Values
[
  {
    "pointer": "/sailNumber",
    "value": "Earth101"
  },
  {
    "pointer": "/sails/1",
    "value": {
      "size": 6.1,
      "sailName": "Lahaina",
      "year": 2023
    }
  },
  {
    "pointer": "/boards/0/year",
    "value": 2022
  },
  {
    "pointer": "/sails/2",
    "value": {
      "size": 7,
      "sailName": "Lahaina",
      "year": 2020
    }
  }
]

Transformation of the unsigned document begins with canonicalizing the document, as shown below.

Example 11: Canonical Document
[
  "_:c14n0 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boardName> \"CompFoil170\" .\n",
  "_:c14n0 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#brand> \"Wailea\" .\n",
  "_:c14n0 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2022\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:c14n1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Lahaina\" .\n",
  "_:c14n1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"7.8E0\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .\n",
  "_:c14n1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2023\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:c14n2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boardName> \"Kanaha Custom\" .\n",
  "_:c14n2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#brand> \"Wailea\" .\n",
  "_:c14n2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2019\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:c14n3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Lahaina\" .\n",
  "_:c14n3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"7\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:c14n3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2020\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:c14n4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Kihei\" .\n",
  "_:c14n4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"5.5E0\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .\n",
  "_:c14n4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2023\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boards> _:c14n0 .\n",
  "_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boards> _:c14n2 .\n",
  "_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailNumber> \"Earth101\" .\n",
  "_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n1 .\n",
  "_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n3 .\n",
  "_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n4 .\n",
  "_:c14n5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:c14n6 .\n",
  "_:c14n6 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Lahaina\" .\n",
  "_:c14n6 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"6.1E0\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .\n",
  "_:c14n6 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2023\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:c14n7 <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type> <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#VerifiableCredential> .\n",
  "_:c14n7 <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#credentialSubject> _:c14n5 .\n",
  "_:c14n7 <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#issuer> <https://vc.example/windsurf/racecommittee> .\n"
]

To prevent possible information leakage from the ordering of the blank node IDs these are processed through a PRF (i.e., the HMAC) to give the canonicalized HMAC document shown below. This represents an ordered list of statements that will be subject to mandatory and selective disclosure, i.e., it is from this list that statements are grouped.

Example 12: Canonical HMAC Document
[
  "_:b0 <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type> <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#VerifiableCredential> .\n",
  "_:b0 <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#credentialSubject> _:b3 .\n",
  "_:b0 <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#issuer> <https://vc.example/windsurf/racecommittee> .\n",
  "_:b1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Lahaina\" .\n",
  "_:b1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"7.8E0\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .\n",
  "_:b1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2023\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:b2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boardName> \"CompFoil170\" .\n",
  "_:b2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#brand> \"Wailea\" .\n",
  "_:b2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2022\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boards> _:b2 .\n",
  "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boards> _:b4 .\n",
  "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailNumber> \"Earth101\" .\n",
  "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:b1 .\n",
  "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:b5 .\n",
  "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:b6 .\n",
  "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:b7 .\n",
  "_:b4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boardName> \"Kanaha Custom\" .\n",
  "_:b4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#brand> \"Wailea\" .\n",
  "_:b4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2019\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:b5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Kihei\" .\n",
  "_:b5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"5.5E0\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .\n",
  "_:b5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2023\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:b6 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Lahaina\" .\n",
  "_:b6 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"6.1E0\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .\n",
  "_:b6 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2023\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:b7 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Lahaina\" .\n",
  "_:b7 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"7\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n",
  "_:b7 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2020\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n"
]

The above canonical document gets grouped into mandatory and non-mandatory statements. The final output of the selective disclosure transformation process is shown below. Each statement is now grouped as mandatory or non-mandatory, and its index in the previous list of statements is remembered.

Example 13: Add Base Transformation
{
  "mandatoryPointers": [
    "/issuer",
    "/credentialSubject/sailNumber",
    "/credentialSubject/sails/1",
    "/credentialSubject/boards/0/year",
    "/credentialSubject/sails/2"
  ],
  "mandatory": {
    "dataType": "Map",
    "value": [
      [
        0,
        "_:b0 <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type> <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#VerifiableCredential> .\n"
      ],
      [
        1,
        "_:b0 <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#credentialSubject> _:b3 .\n"
      ],
      [
        2,
        "_:b0 <https://www.w3.org/2018/credentials#issuer> <https://vc.example/windsurf/racecommittee> .\n"
      ],
      [
        8,
        "_:b2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2022\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n"
      ],
      [
        9,
        "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boards> _:b2 .\n"
      ],
      [
        11,
        "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailNumber> \"Earth101\" .\n"
      ],
      [
        14,
        "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:b6 .\n"
      ],
      [
        15,
        "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:b7 .\n"
      ],
      [
        22,
        "_:b6 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Lahaina\" .\n"
      ],
      [
        23,
        "_:b6 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"6.1E0\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .\n"
      ],
      [
        24,
        "_:b6 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2023\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n"
      ],
      [
        25,
        "_:b7 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Lahaina\" .\n"
      ],
      [
        26,
        "_:b7 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"7\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n"
      ],
      [
        27,
        "_:b7 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2020\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n"
      ]
    ]
  },
  "nonMandatory": {
    "dataType": "Map",
    "value": [
      [
        3,
        "_:b1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Lahaina\" .\n"
      ],
      [
        4,
        "_:b1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"7.8E0\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .\n"
      ],
      [
        5,
        "_:b1 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2023\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n"
      ],
      [
        6,
        "_:b2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boardName> \"CompFoil170\" .\n"
      ],
      [
        7,
        "_:b2 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#brand> \"Wailea\" .\n"
      ],
      [
        10,
        "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boards> _:b4 .\n"
      ],
      [
        12,
        "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:b1 .\n"
      ],
      [
        13,
        "_:b3 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sails> _:b5 .\n"
      ],
      [
        16,
        "_:b4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#boardName> \"Kanaha Custom\" .\n"
      ],
      [
        17,
        "_:b4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#brand> \"Wailea\" .\n"
      ],
      [
        18,
        "_:b4 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2019\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n"
      ],
      [
        19,
        "_:b5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#sailName> \"Kihei\" .\n"
      ],
      [
        20,
        "_:b5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#size> \"5.5E0\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#double> .\n"
      ],
      [
        21,
        "_:b5 <https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#year> \"2023\"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer> .\n"
      ]
    ]
  },
  "hmacKeyString": "00112233445566778899AABBCCDDEEFF00112233445566778899AABBCCDDEEFF"
}

The next step is to create the base proof configuration and canonicalize it. This is shown in the following two examples.

Example 14: Base Proof Configuration
{
  "type": "DataIntegrityProof",
  "cryptosuite": "bbs-2023",
  "created": "2023-08-15T23:36:38Z",
  "verificationMethod": "did:key:zUC7DerdEmfZ8f4pFajXgGwJoMkV1ofMTmEG5UoNvnWiPiLuGKNeqgRpLH2TV4Xe5mJ2cXV76gRN7LFQwapF1VFu6x2yrr5ci1mXqC1WNUrnHnLgvfZfMH7h6xP6qsf9EKRQrPQ#zUC7DerdEmfZ8f4pFajXgGwJoMkV1ofMTmEG5UoNvnWiPiLuGKNeqgRpLH2TV4Xe5mJ2cXV76gRN7LFQwapF1VFu6x2yrr5ci1mXqC1WNUrnHnLgvfZfMH7h6xP6qsf9EKRQrPQ",
  "proofPurpose": "assertionMethod",
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/credentials/v2",
    {
      "@vocab": "https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#"
    }
  ]
}
Example 15: Canonical Base Proof Configuration
_:c14n0 <http://purl.org/dc/terms/created> "2023-08-15T23:36:38Z"^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime> .
_:c14n0 <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type> <https://w3id.org/security#DataIntegrityProof> .
_:c14n0 <https://w3id.org/security#cryptosuite> "bbs-2023"^^<https://w3id.org/security#cryptosuiteString> .
_:c14n0 <https://w3id.org/security#proofPurpose> <https://w3id.org/security#assertionMethod> .
_:c14n0 <https://w3id.org/security#verificationMethod> <did:key:zUC7DerdEmfZ8f4pFajXgGwJoMkV1ofMTmEG5UoNvnWiPiLuGKNeqgRpLH2TV4Xe5mJ2cXV76gRN7LFQwapF1VFu6x2yrr5ci1mXqC1WNUrnHnLgvfZfMH7h6xP6qsf9EKRQrPQ#zUC7DerdEmfZ8f4pFajXgGwJoMkV1ofMTmEG5UoNvnWiPiLuGKNeqgRpLH2TV4Xe5mJ2cXV76gRN7LFQwapF1VFu6x2yrr5ci1mXqC1WNUrnHnLgvfZfMH7h6xP6qsf9EKRQrPQ> .

In the hashing step, we compute the SHA-256 hash of the canonicalized proof options to produce the proofHash, and we compute the SHA-256 hash of the join of all the mandatory N-Quads to produce the mandatoryHash. These are shown below in hexadecimal format.

Example 16: Add Base Hashes
{
  "proofHash": "3a5bbf25d34d90b18c35cd2357be6a6f42301e94fc9e52f77e93b773c5614bdf",
  "mandatoryHash": "555de05f898817e31301bac187d0c3ff2b03e2cbdb4adb4d568c17de961f9a18"
}

Shown below are the computed bbsSignature in hexadecimal, and the mandatoryPointers. These are are fed to the final serialization step with the hmacKey.

Example 17: Add Base Signing
{
  "bbsSignature": "86bb8063768d4b708f9a65821ee6fe426b3d4f6fe5c2c5c9a5f80caa573fd8c20cbdf17826fe4e1a624070ba5f201d9202a0fceb55842ea9e61a72a7aa04891437fc35f6ab9ef8bf8ec3004cc46c9458",
  "mandatoryPointers": [
    "/issuer",
    "/credentialSubject/sailNumber",
    "/credentialSubject/sails/1",
    "/credentialSubject/boards/0/year",
    "/credentialSubject/sails/2"
  ]
}

Finally, the values above are run through the algorithm of Section 3.3.1 serializeBaseProofValue, to produce the proofValue which is used in the signed base document shown below.

Example 18: Signed Base Document
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/credentials/v2",
    {
      "@vocab": "https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#"
    }
  ],
  "type": [
    "VerifiableCredential"
  ],
  "issuer": "https://vc.example/windsurf/racecommittee",
  "credentialSubject": {
    "sailNumber": "Earth101",
    "sails": [
      {
        "size": 5.5,
        "sailName": "Kihei",
        "year": 2023
      },
      {
        "size": 6.1,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2023
      },
      {
        "size": 7,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2020
      },
      {
        "size": 7.8,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2023
      }
    ],
    "boards": [
      {
        "boardName": "CompFoil170",
        "brand": "Wailea",
        "year": 2022
      },
      {
        "boardName": "Kanaha Custom",
        "brand": "Wailea",
        "year": 2019
      }
    ]
  },
  "proof": {
    "type": "DataIntegrityProof",
    "cryptosuite": "bbs-2023",
    "created": "2023-08-15T23:36:38Z",
    "verificationMethod": "did:key:zUC7DerdEmfZ8f4pFajXgGwJoMkV1ofMTmEG5UoNvnWiPiLuGKNeqgRpLH2TV4Xe5mJ2cXV76gRN7LFQwapF1VFu6x2yrr5ci1mXqC1WNUrnHnLgvfZfMH7h6xP6qsf9EKRQrPQ#zUC7DerdEmfZ8f4pFajXgGwJoMkV1ofMTmEG5UoNvnWiPiLuGKNeqgRpLH2TV4Xe5mJ2cXV76gRN7LFQwapF1VFu6x2yrr5ci1mXqC1WNUrnHnLgvfZfMH7h6xP6qsf9EKRQrPQ",
    "proofPurpose": "assertionMethod",
    "proofValue": "u2V0ChVhQhruAY3aNS3CPmmWCHub-Qms9T2_lwsXJpfgMqlc_2MIMvfF4Jv5OGmJAcLpfIB2SAqD861WELqnmGnKnqgSJFDf8Nfarnvi_jsMATMRslFhYQDpbvyXTTZCxjDXNI1e-am9CMB6U_J5S936Tt3PFYUvfVV3gX4mIF-MTAbrBh9DD_ysD4svbSttNVowX3pYfmhhYYKTvGvo9pXVJbxIrm3i4wkdhUxqKCTIGrnxFuAdZwWi6T3omD5wzZ7bAGbRneEEQSxBmXtvnC6Pr59nPv_v3HrAW9wq_uxYzF_NyaX3GPv0h_FV2T2OSao8C6uoyWiqIj1ggABEiM0RVZneImaq7zN3u_wARIjNEVWZ3iJmqu8zd7v-FZy9pc3N1ZXJ4HS9jcmVkZW50aWFsU3ViamVjdC9zYWlsTnVtYmVyeBovY3JlZGVudGlhbFN1YmplY3Qvc2FpbHMvMXggL2NyZWRlbnRpYWxTdWJqZWN0L2JvYXJkcy8wL3llYXJ4Gi9jcmVkZW50aWFsU3ViamVjdC9zYWlscy8y"
  }
}

A.2 Derived Proof

Random numbers are used, and an optional presentationHeader can be an input, for the creation of BBS proofs. To furnish a deterministic set of test vectors, we used the Mocked Random Scalars procedure from [CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE]. The seed and presentationHeader values we used for generation of the derived proof test vectors are given in hex, below.

Example 19: seed and presentation header values
{
  "presentationHeaderHex": "113377aa",
  "pseudoRandSeedHex": "332e313431353932363533353839373933323338343632363433333833323739"
}

To create a derived proof, a holder starts with a signed document containing a base proof. The base document we will use for these test vectors is the final example from Section A.1 Base Proof, above. The first step is to run the algorithm of Section 3.3.2 parseBaseProofValue to recover bbsSignature, hmacKey, and mandatoryPointers, as shown below.

Example 20: Recovered Base Signature Data
{
  "bbsSignature": "86bb8063768d4b708f9a65821ee6fe426b3d4f6fe5c2c5c9a5f80caa573fd8c20cbdf17826fe4e1a624070ba5f201d9202a0fceb55842ea9e61a72a7aa04891437fc35f6ab9ef8bf8ec3004cc46c9458",
  "hmacKey": "00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff",
  "mandatoryPointers": [
    "/issuer",
    "/credentialSubject/sailNumber",
    "/credentialSubject/sails/1",
    "/credentialSubject/boards/0/year",
    "/credentialSubject/sails/2"
  ]
}

Next, the holder needs to indicate what else, if anything, they wish to reveal to the verifiers, by specifying JSON pointers for selective disclosure. In our windsurfing competition scenario, a sailor (the holder) has just completed their first day of racing, and wishes to reveal to the general public (the verifiers) all the details of the windsurfing boards they used in the competition. These are shown below. Note that this slightly overlaps with the mandatory disclosed information which included only the year of their most recent board.

Example 21: Selective Disclosure Pointers
["/credentialSubject/boards/0", "/credentialSubject/boards/1"]

To produce the revealDocument (i.e., the unsigned document that will eventually be signed and sent to the verifier), we append the selective pointers to the mandatory pointers, and input these combined pointers along with the document without proof to the selectJsonLd algorithm of [DI-ECDSA], to get the result shown below.

Example 22: Unsigned Reveal Document
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/credentials/v2",
    {
      "@vocab": "https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#"
    }
  ],
  "type": [
    "VerifiableCredential"
  ],
  "issuer": "https://vc.example/windsurf/racecommittee",
  "credentialSubject": {
    "sailNumber": "Earth101",
    "sails": [
      {
        "size": 6.1,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2023
      },
      {
        "size": 7,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2020
      }
    ],
    "boards": [
      {
        "year": 2022,
        "boardName": "CompFoil170",
        "brand": "Wailea"
      },
      {
        "boardName": "Kanaha Custom",
        "brand": "Wailea",
        "year": 2019
      }
    ]
  }
}

Now that we know what the revealed document looks like, we need to furnish appropriately updated information to the verifier about which statements are mandatory, and the indexes for the selected non-mandatory statements. Running step 6 of the 3.3.3 createDisclosureData yields an abundance of information about various statement groups relative to the original document. Below we show a portion of the indexes for those groups.

Example 23: Derived Group Indexes
{
  "combinedIndexes":[0,1,2,6,7,8,9,10,11,14,15,16,17,18,22,23,24,25,26,27],
  "mandatoryIndexes":[0,1,2,8,9,11,14,15,22,23,24,25,26,27],
  "nonMandatoryIndexes":[3,4,5,6,7,10,12,13,16,17,18,19,20,21],
  "selectiveIndexes":[0,1,6,7,8,9,10,16,17,18]
}

The verifier needs to be able to aggregate and hash the mandatory statements. To enable this, we furnish them with a list of indexes of the mandatory statements adjusted to their positions in the reveal document (i.e., relative to the combinedIndexes), while the selectiveIndexes need to be adjusted relative to their positions within the nonMandatoryIndexes. These "adjusted" indexes are shown below.

Example 24: Adjusted Mandatory and Selective Indexes
{
  "adjMandatoryIndexes":[0,1,2,5,6,8,9,10,14,15,16,17,18,19],
  "adjSelectiveIndexes":[3,4,5,8,9,10]
}

The last important piece of disclosure data is a mapping of canonical blank node IDs to HMAC-based shuffled IDs, the labelMap, computed according to Section 3.3.3 createDisclosureData. This is shown below along with the rest of the disclosure data minus the reveal document.

Example 25: Disclosure Data
{
  "bbsProof":"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",
  "labelMap":{"dataType":"Map","value":[["c14n0","b2"],["c14n1","b4"],["c14n2","b3"],["c14n3","b7"],["c14n4","b6"],["c14n5","b0"]]},
  "mandatoryIndexes":[0,1,2,5,6,8,9,10,14,15,16,17,18,19],
  "adjSelectiveIndexes":[3,4,5,8,9,10],
  "presentationHeader":{"0":17,"1":51,"2":119,"3":170}
}

Finally, using the disclosure data above with the algorithm of Section 3.3.6 serializeDerivedProofValue, we obtain the signed derived (reveal) document shown below.

Example 26: Signed Derived Document
{
  "@context": [
    "https://www.w3.org/ns/credentials/v2",
    {
      "@vocab": "https://windsurf.grotto-networking.com/selective#"
    }
  ],
  "type": [
    "VerifiableCredential"
  ],
  "issuer": "https://vc.example/windsurf/racecommittee",
  "credentialSubject": {
    "sailNumber": "Earth101",
    "sails": [
      {
        "size": 6.1,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2023
      },
      {
        "size": 7,
        "sailName": "Lahaina",
        "year": 2020
      }
    ],
    "boards": [
      {
        "year": 2022,
        "boardName": "CompFoil170",
        "brand": "Wailea"
      },
      {
        "boardName": "Kanaha Custom",
        "brand": "Wailea",
        "year": 2019
      }
    ]
  },
  "proof": {
    "type": "DataIntegrityProof",
    "cryptosuite": "bbs-2023",
    "created": "2023-08-15T23:36:38Z",
    "verificationMethod": "did:key:zUC7DerdEmfZ8f4pFajXgGwJoMkV1ofMTmEG5UoNvnWiPiLuGKNeqgRpLH2TV4Xe5mJ2cXV76gRN7LFQwapF1VFu6x2yrr5ci1mXqC1WNUrnHnLgvfZfMH7h6xP6qsf9EKRQrPQ#zUC7DerdEmfZ8f4pFajXgGwJoMkV1ofMTmEG5UoNvnWiPiLuGKNeqgRpLH2TV4Xe5mJ2cXV76gRN7LFQwapF1VFu6x2yrr5ci1mXqC1WNUrnHnLgvfZfMH7h6xP6qsf9EKRQrPQ",
    "proofPurpose": "assertionMethod",
    "proofValue": "u2V0DhVkCEIW3LXS1Wq525PjphjhzUvbT4T8ZOH9ZNanzTFmqOvd4hVAe8dumdXa9JObasbHFs4kWcREsJpgsRB1PNS4byPVFESf72irSQNml1pM_RV23Qcw-edMoG8W2ERGLNjRh8ral7N1CP2t2cRaAgkZl9Q7sH1y68hnukOZs6sV1FG0aiTX3cL5tKaN2sA5OOaT6d1Xs9OtCqjur_W5IuyPpEIHwjQ0lm0ApaD0BwlN4vjxhIToJd1C4zio8CRUGGlR0BbPOWH0dgpkmn60pEDUJs-UwZ_e2B46dxmpREhkq7eNmLm2sWHbZRf0Fhj-ySbD8oC4Qq1FzZQ72ZeksPqcuq6lPyoYM1sY5U45RVvjLw7TSIvehH4N7uedrpU1YwbSsg07zOKPbS_ZFtGIhU8iX9HclX0Dk_MeRk0iuW_kDKp98CHbkemZmyp8XhnOsekG4ZEgNjoTGZVzS8OGGbe3EZ1kKK6dsKMtB89VYLgdztzeRS4NT_qTfkYoCKqWqkvSQ8LPC7fSk1VOLjQeqJTDxGIY-ZU7qqsacLAIFCcJClME72nIcc7hhC7zn5wMNFxDdUUhzGlAmx0HR2p4Gk9MrkNCbtYqOSilaMvsn9lSgPDHFbmw6-xqj8vokD1CV8x_ouV-BebxECM-WcT867GoGQJpvFIapnZkjvv2ydNPgT2-qm_MWzposT14bxtsDFZMyO6YAAgEEAgMDBwQGBQCOAAECBQYICQoODxAREhOGAwQFCAkKRBEzd6o"
  }
}

B. Acknowledgements

Portions of the work on this specification have been funded by the United States Department of Homeland Security's (US DHS) Silicon Valley Innovation Program under contracts 70RSAT20T00000003, and 70RSAT20T00000033. The content of this specification does not necessarily reflect the position or the policy of the U.S. Government and no official endorsement should be inferred.

C. References

C.1 Normative references

[CFRG-BBS-SIGNATURE]
The BBS Signature Scheme. Tobias Looker; Vasilis Kalos; Andrew Whitehead; Mike Lodder. Draft. URL: https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-irtf-cfrg-bbs-signatures-02.html
[CFRG-Blind-BBS-Signature]
Blind BBS Signatures. V. Kalos; G. Bernstein. 2024. URL: https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-kalos-bbs-blind-signatures-00.html#name-proof-generation
[CFRG-Pseudonym-BBS-Signature]
BBS per Verifier Linkability. V. Kalos. 2023. URL: https://basileioskal.github.io/bbs-per-verifier-id/draft-vasilis-bbs-per-verifier-linkability.html
[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/
[INFRA]
Infra Standard. Anne van Kesteren; Domenic Denicola. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://infra.spec.whatwg.org/
[MULTIBASE]
Multibase. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-multiformats-multibase-01
[RDF-CANON]
RDF Dataset Canonicalization. Dave Longley; Gregg Kellogg; Dan Yamamoto. W3C. 30 November 2023. W3C Candidate Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-canon/
[RFC2104]
HMAC: Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication. H. Krawczyk; M. Bellare; R. Canetti. IETF. February 1997. Informational. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2104
[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
[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
[RFC8949]
Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR). C. Bormann; P. Hoffman. IETF. December 2020. Internet Standard. URL: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8949
[VC-DATA-INTEGRITY]
Verifiable Credential Data Integrity 1.0. David Longley; Manu Sporny. W3C Verifiable Credentials Working Group. Working Draft. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/vc-data-integrity/
[VC-DATA-MODEL-2.0]
Verifiable Credentials Data Model v2.0. Manu Sporny; Ted Thibodeau Jr; Ivan Herman; Michael Jones; Gabe Cohen. W3C. 7 February 2024. W3C Candidate Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/vc-data-model-2.0/
[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/

C.2 Informative references

[CDL2016]
Anonymous Attestation Using the Strong Diffie Hellman Assumption Revisited. Jan Camenisch; Manu Drijvers; Anja Lehmann. Cryptology ePrint Archive, Paper 2016/663. 2016. URL: https://eprint.iacr.org/2016/663
[CFRG-PAIRING-FRIENDLY]
Pairing-Friendly Curves. Yumi Sakemi; Tetsutaro Kobayashi; Tsunekazu Saito; Riad S. Wahby. Draft. URL: https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-irtf-cfrg-pairing-friendly-curves-11.html
[MULTICODEC]
Multicodec. URL: https://github.com/multiformats/multicodec/
[NISTIR8053]
NISTIR 8053: De-Identification of Personal Information. Simson L. Garfinkel. October 2015. URL: https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/ir/2015/NIST.IR.8053.pdf
[Powar2023]
SoK: Managing risks of linkage attacks on data privacy. J. Powar; A. R. Beresford. Proceedings on Privacy Enhancing Technologies. 2023. URL: https://petsymposium.org/popets/2023/popets-2023-0043.php
[Pugliese2020]
Long-Term Observation on Browser Fingerprinting: Users' Trackability and Perspective. G. Pugliese; C. Riess; F. Gassmann; Z. Benenson. Proceedings on Privacy Enhancing Technologies. 2020. URL: https://petsymposium.org/popets/2020/popets-2020-0041.php
[Taming_EdDSAs]
Taming the many EdDSAs. Konstantinos Chalkias; François Garillot; Valeria Nikolaenko. Cryptology ePrint Archive, Paper 2020/1244. 2020. URL: https://eprint.iacr.org/2020/1244
[TZ2023]
Revisiting BBS Signatures. Stefano Tessaro; Chenzhi Zhu. Cryptology ePrint Archive, Paper 2023/275. 2023. URL: https://eprint.iacr.org/2023/275
[vc-bitstring-status-list]
Bitstring Status List v1.0. Manu Sporny; Dave Longley; Michael Prorock; Mahmoud Alkhraishi. W3C. 4 February 2024. W3C Working Draft. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/vc-bitstring-status-list/