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Module 1 — Identity Anchor

Category: Governance & Enforcement
Subcategory: Identity
Module: Identity Anchor
Type: Identity Module

Standard: OBIDENITY™ — Origin-Bound Identity Standard
Version: 1.0
Status: Canonical · Open Standard
Effective Date: 19 March 2026

Authority: OOF™ Origin Open Foundation™
Founder & System Design Architect: Miroslav Pis
Protection: MIP™ — Methodological Intellectual Property
Canonical Language: English (UCL™)

Canonical Definition

Identity Anchor defines the structural conditions under which an identity is created
as a unique, non-replicable origin point bound to a verifiable origin event.

The Identity Anchor establishes the existence of identity and serves as the
immutable reference for its entire lifecycle.


Why This Matters

Without a defined origin, identity cannot be distinguished from duplication or
imitation.

Most identity systems allow:
  • duplication
  • reassignment
  • overwrite
  • loss of origin

This creates environments where identity cannot be trusted.

Identity Anchor ensures that identity begins as a single, verifiable event that cannot
be replicated or replaced.


Minimum Implementation Framework (MIF)

Step 1 — Create Unique Identity Anchor

Identity must be created as a unique, non-reusable anchor.

Minimum requirement:
  • unique identity anchor
  • no duplication
  • no reuse of identity

Step 2 — Bind to Origin Event

Identity must be linked to a verifiable origin.

Minimum requirement:
  • defined origin event
  • recorded timestamp
  • identifiable responsible entity

Step 3 — Ensure Non-Overwriteability

Identity Anchor must not be replaceable.

Minimum requirement:
  • no overwrite
  • no reassignment
  • no substitution

Step 4 — Enable Anchor Verification

The origin of identity must be verifiable.

Minimum requirement:
  • traceable origin record
  • reconstructable creation event
  • verifiable link to issuer

Use Case 1 — Cross-Platform Identity Ownership

Scenario
An individual or entity operates across multiple platforms, each creating separate
identities.


Application
Identity Anchor establishes a single origin-bound identity independent of platforms.


Result
  • identity is no longer controlled by platforms
  • identity persists across systems
  • no duplication or fragmentation of identity

Use Case 2 — AI-Driven Identity Representation

Scenario
A public figure or organization uses AI agents to represent their identity in
communication and interaction.


Application
Identity Anchor binds all representations to a verifiable origin identity.


Result
  • AI interactions remain tied to a real identity
  • impersonation becomes detectable
  • trust is preserved across digital interactions

Structural Principle

Identity begins only once.
Without a verifiable beginning, identity does not exist.


Closing Statement


An identity without origin is not an identity.



Related Documents

→ OBIDENITY™ Standard