One thing people always worry about with identity stuff is data. Fair enough.
So here’s the important part about @idOS_network: it can’t turn into a data broker, even if someone tried.
Here’s why: • Your data is never waiting there in readable form. It’s encrypted from the start, with your own keys.
• When an app needs something, it doesn’t just "get your data" It asks, you approve. You decide what it can see and for how long.
• Even the network operators don’t see anything useful. All they ever touch are encrypted pieces that don’t mean anything on their own.
So when idOS says "We can’t sell your data", it’s an architectural constraint.
That’s the part I like most. You’re not trusting a promise, you’re trusting an architecture that doesn’t leave room for abuse.
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One thing people always worry about with identity stuff is data. Fair enough.
So here’s the important part about @idOS_network: it can’t turn into a data broker, even if someone tried.
Here’s why:
• Your data is never waiting there in readable form. It’s encrypted from the start, with your own keys.
• When an app needs something, it doesn’t just "get your data" It asks, you approve. You decide what it can see and for how long.
• Even the network operators don’t see anything useful. All they ever touch are encrypted pieces that don’t mean anything on their own.
So when idOS says "We can’t sell your data", it’s an architectural constraint.
That’s the part I like most.
You’re not trusting a promise, you’re trusting an architecture that doesn’t leave room for abuse.