240 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
240 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
---
|
||
title: "A Model for Identity in Software"
|
||
date: 2021-01-31
|
||
tags:
|
||
- philosophy
|
||
- pluralgang
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
Most software on the market has a very boring relationship with identity. Most
|
||
assume that one user has one "real" name and one "username". Some software
|
||
associates identifiers like phone numbers with people. Some software allows you
|
||
to have multiple entirely different accounts and then share nothing between
|
||
them. Some software makes this easier. Some software (such as forum engines)
|
||
have the concept of sub-accounts that allow you to compartmentalize parts of
|
||
your identity and switch between them at will. However, there is very little out
|
||
there in terms of software that gets this _right_. There's always limitations,
|
||
difficulties, red tape and caveats. I would like to discuss a proposal for how
|
||
to handle this in a way that is flexible enough to cover the widest possible
|
||
expressions of human identity so that software can be as inclusive as it can be
|
||
from the ground up.
|
||
|
||
This is a very serious thing and I am treating this very seriously, however it
|
||
can get kind of boring reading everything in a serious tone so I am attempting
|
||
to liven it up with some more creative scenarios.
|
||
|
||
## The Existing Clusterfuck of Identity
|
||
|
||
So, let's start out with describing some assumptions that programmers have about
|
||
identity so that this proposal can address them. I'm going to be borrowing from
|
||
a few sources:
|
||
|
||
- [Falsehoods Programmers Believe About
|
||
Names](https://www.kalzumeus.com/2010/06/17/falsehoods-programmers-believe-about-names/)
|
||
- [The Plurality Playbook](https://www.pluralpride.com/playbook)
|
||
|
||
Here's some big assumptions that can cause the most practical issues:
|
||
|
||
- Each user has at most one name
|
||
- Each user has at most one username they prefer
|
||
- Each user has at least one phone number or email address they'd prefer to use
|
||
- Users have no reason to create multiple logically separate identites
|
||
|
||
If you have never encountered the kind of situation where people have multiple
|
||
names that they actively go by before, this will likely sound very confusing to
|
||
you at first glance. People just have given names right? They're given to you by
|
||
your Mom and Dad and then you're just stuck with them for the rest of your life,
|
||
right?
|
||
|
||
Wrong.
|
||
|
||
Your "Mom" and "Dad" in fact have names of their own beyond "Mom" and "Dad".
|
||
They could have names like "Karen Smith" or "David Carmicheal". But to you they
|
||
could be "Mom" or "Dad". You could be "son" or "daughter" to your "Mom" and
|
||
"Dad". You could be something else entirely to someone else. Yet those are all
|
||
separate logical parts of someone's social identities. If you are called "Mom"
|
||
in a context by someone, it can have a very different connotation than if you
|
||
were called by a username, nickname or legal name.
|
||
|
||
[As a contrast, think about cartoons like The Fairly Oddparents where Timmy's
|
||
Mom only ever has the name "Timmy's Mom". You'd normally expect her to have
|
||
another name, but Timmy's Mom is only ever referred to as "Timmy's Mom" or
|
||
"Mom".](conversation://Mara/hacker)
|
||
|
||
As an example, let's consider the various ways that I, the author of this
|
||
document experience identity that defy most of the identity systems that I have
|
||
to deal with. I am publishing this post under the name Christine Dodrill. That
|
||
name is my legal name that I use for dealing with the government and in formal
|
||
situations like that. One of the places that this post gets published is [my
|
||
GitHub account Xe](https://github.com/Xe). I also tend to use that name in some
|
||
places, I see it as a lot less formal than my legal name. Generally contexts
|
||
that I use it in are places that I feel safer in, however it's still detached
|
||
from my more personal relationships. Then there's my handle Cadey. I consider
|
||
this one to be the "real me" (for some definition of "real" and "me" that makes
|
||
sense in context). I don't use it everywhere because Cadey is a lot less
|
||
formal/a lot more personal, shitposty and friendly than the other names are. If
|
||
you see me using it or I am in a space with others using that to refer to
|
||
myself, this is actually a fairly significant sign of trust in the situation or
|
||
the people involved.
|
||
|
||
[<a href="https://twitter.com/theprincessxena">Cadey A. Ratio</a> the name is a
|
||
shitposty reference to a term in online gaming called the Kill/Death/Assist
|
||
ratio. K/D/A Ratio, Cadey A. Ratio.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
|
||
|
||
Also, as an aside I am going to be talking about some things in the rest of this
|
||
article that really do mix the name-based compartmentalization that I do
|
||
together, if you really want to ask clarifying questions or whatever I suggest
|
||
doing it over somewhere my name is listed as Cadey. There are some questions
|
||
that I am hesitant to answer in professional contexts. Please respect this.
|
||
|
||
I have not seen any system on the internet that allows me to properly map the
|
||
differences between these logical facets of my identity. Not without having to
|
||
make multiple accounts, keep track of god knows how many email addresses and use
|
||
ungodly hacks such as [Rambox](https://rambox.pro/#home). Seriously, I've tried.
|
||
People wonder why I would need a tower with more than 32 GB of ram and having to
|
||
keep so many webmail clients and instances of Discord open is basically the
|
||
entire reason why.
|
||
|
||
So, one common thread between my escapades with identity and someone that wants
|
||
to keep their kids, knitting buddies, DnD group and gaming buddies separate is
|
||
that they are the same _person_ wanting logical separation between different
|
||
_facets_ of their identity. They may not want their kids to know that they play
|
||
Grognar the Destroyer on saturday nights, but they might also not want their
|
||
very religious knitting buddies to easily be able to find out that they roleplay
|
||
as a succubus in an MMORPG.
|
||
|
||
People that are transgender, nonbinary or a political activist may also want to
|
||
separate out parts of their identity for fear of rumors or persecution. Coming
|
||
out as transgender is one of those 50/50 splits between "nothing bad will
|
||
happen" and "that person will never see you the same way again and disown you".
|
||
That incurs a _huge_ amount of social risk. This is a very strong case for
|
||
having a way to logically separate out part of one's identity. This could mean
|
||
the difference from someone being accepted by their family or shunned by them.
|
||
This could mean the difference between an activist being able to continue to
|
||
advocate for universal healthcare coverage and that activist being thrown in
|
||
jail for a very long time with trumped up charges for speaking out against the
|
||
actions of Big Toothpaste.
|
||
|
||
However, what about _entirely separate people_ that need to share computers or
|
||
accounts? This could range from a married couple sharing a computer for
|
||
financial reasons to one case that I can think of that completely annihilates
|
||
most assumptions programmers make about identity:
|
||
[Plural systems](https://www.pluralpride.com/playbook#introduction).
|
||
|
||
<center>
|
||
|
||
![A "terminator chases hiding terrified anime girl" meme with the terminator
|
||
labeled "Plural Systems" and the terrified anime girl labeled "Identity
|
||
Systems"](https://cdn.christine.website/file/christine-static/blog/plural-terminator-meme.jpg)
|
||
|
||
</center>
|
||
|
||
Usually I write these articles assuming that people reference links if they are
|
||
confused or for later reference. However, for this case to make sense I feel
|
||
that I need to directly quote part of that source so that I can help make my
|
||
point more clear:
|
||
|
||
> Plurality (also known as multiplicity) is the state of having more than one
|
||
> person/consciousness sharing a body. Together, the people who share a body
|
||
> make up a plural system or multiple system, often referred to simply as a
|
||
> system.
|
||
|
||
[As an aside, this post may be one of if not the first time you have ever
|
||
encountered plurality in any form. Please do your own research before jumping to
|
||
drastic conclusions or labeling people with disorder names that "feel right" in
|
||
the moment. Some other places to look at include:<ul><li><a href="https://morethanone.info">More Than One</a></li><li><a href="/blog/plurality-driven-development-2019-08-04">Plurality-Driven Development</a></li><li><a href="https://meltingasphalt.com/neurons-gone-wild/">Neurons Gone Wild</a></li><li><a href="https://aeon.co/ideas/what-we-can-learn-about-respect-and-identity-from-plurals">What we can learn about respect and identity from ‘plurals’</a></ul>](conversation://Mara/hacker)
|
||
|
||
As far as existing identity systems go, this is the _worst case scenario_. This
|
||
throws the "Users have no reason to create multiple logically separate
|
||
identities" assumption so far out of the window that I think it may be in Narnia
|
||
by this point. Plural systems that I know have had to resort to things like
|
||
[PluralKit](https://pluralkit.me) that uses user-definable text prefixes and
|
||
suffixes to kinda-sorta-maybe implement multiple account support into Discord
|
||
communities (however at the expense of making it _much harder_ to use existing
|
||
moderation tools with PluralKit messages).
|
||
|
||
Not to mention platforms that need multiple phone numbers gets financially
|
||
expensive for systems that want to have each member have their own connections
|
||
to other people. Making multiple accounts on services can also be a huge pain in
|
||
the ass because programs do not have decent (if any) support for easily changing
|
||
between accounts without having to keep ram-hungry clients open or constantly
|
||
changing based on context. I certainly have a huge amount of trouble doing this.
|
||
Rambox is decent enough for the lot of us to be able to easily multibox Discord,
|
||
but it is such a terrible pile of hacks that we all really would love to get rid
|
||
of.
|
||
|
||
[If all of this is coming as a shock to you, you have probably had a much more
|
||
privileged/socially advantaged life that has protected you from having to think
|
||
about these things. This is okay. Ignorance is the first step to understanding.
|
||
Don't be afraid to find out more. This is not new either. Identity has probably
|
||
always been this complicated, but facts and circumstances have prevented it from
|
||
being discussed as openly as a blogpost such as this
|
||
does.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
|
||
|
||
## A Middle Path
|
||
|
||
How can we make things better for both cases?
|
||
|
||
There is not much prior art out there (annoyingly enough), however a large step
|
||
in the right direction comes from a very unlikely source: Google Plus. One of
|
||
Google Plus' distinguishing features was the the concept of
|
||
[circles](https://computer.howstuffworks.com/internet/social-networking/networks/google-plus1.htm).
|
||
Circles allowed you to separate people you communicate with into groups such as
|
||
"College Friend", "Coworker", "Furry", "Knitting Group" or "Family". One of the
|
||
main things that Google Plus stopped short of doing was the ability to let other
|
||
people have multiple ways to see you (they also had some shockingly bad takes
|
||
such as the insistence of "real names" which may have caused untold amounts of
|
||
harm in the process). You ended up with one "you" but many groups you could
|
||
limit posts to.
|
||
|
||
["Real names" is usually a poorly defined concept, however in this case it
|
||
usually means "whatever is on your government ID", which can be shockingly
|
||
problematic to transgender or gender-nonbinary people that live in life
|
||
situations or countries that prevent them from being able to have agency over
|
||
their government ID.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
|
||
|
||
Solutions such as subaccounts or Rambox are hacks to work around the disease,
|
||
but what could a cure at the source look like?
|
||
|
||
Consider [Firefox
|
||
Containers](https://www.maketecheasier.com/firefox-multi-account-containers-explained/).
|
||
They are completely separate sub-identities but share common things with your
|
||
"main" identity such as the password manager and extensions. Being able to
|
||
communicate with other people as a logically separate identity should be as easy
|
||
as it is to spawn a tab in a Firefox container.
|
||
|
||
There should be a "bank" of identities that you can pick between in contexts
|
||
where those identities are relevant. I should be able to flip over to Nicole's
|
||
view of a Discord guild, send a message that she's dictating out to a
|
||
conversation about the flavor profiles of Bavarian sausage casings and then flip
|
||
back to my discussion about the philosophical consequences of eBooks compared to
|
||
traditional print media in about as much time as it took me to come up with
|
||
something sufficiently bizarre for this sentence. An advantage of this being
|
||
baked into the substrate of platforms means that moderators aren't shafted by
|
||
this either. If you ban one of someone's identities from a place, you should ban
|
||
them all from that place to prevent fractal
|
||
[sockpuppeting](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sock_puppet_account).
|
||
|
||
I should be able to connect with someone at work, and then that same person
|
||
online without either of us having any idea that we are the same people. I
|
||
should be able to talk about legal things as Christine, personal things as Cadey
|
||
and the space inbetween as Xe. The girls and I should be able to talk about our
|
||
own things individually without our coworkers, our professional contacts, Mai's
|
||
DnD group buddies, our own personal friends, acquaintances and people that are
|
||
in groups I moderate without anyone being able to connect them all together at
|
||
the platform level without my explicit permission (if only to avoid some
|
||
uncomfortable philosophical discussions about personhood in professional
|
||
contexts where they aren't very relevant to begin with). I should be able to
|
||
select from other identities like I can select email accounts on my macbook.
|
||
|
||
[What if it was easy to assume a different identity to say a message as it is
|
||
for me to write sentences like this?](conversation://Mara/hmm)
|
||
|
||
Yes, this would be a hard thing to implement given existing technical debt. It
|
||
throws a lot of assumptions about identity on these platforms out of the window.
|
||
However I believe that it is really worth doing, because the benefits in terms
|
||
of privacy will _far_ outweigh the implementation costs. You have more than one
|
||
"you" in practice. Software should let us make these kinds of logical
|
||
separations easier, not harder. Having to use tools such as Rambox means that
|
||
the identity model of a service is fundamentally flawed.
|