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OBIDENITY™ — Origin-Bound Identity Standard

Category: Governance & Enforcement
Subcategory: Identity

Minimal Standard for Non-Replicable,
Traceable, and Audit-Bound Identity


Version: 1.0
Status: Canonical · Open Standard
Effective Date: 19 March 2026

Authority: OOF™ Origin Open Foundation™
Protection: MIP™ — Methodological Intellectual Property
Canonical Language: English (UCL™)

Canonical Definition


OBIDENITY™ (Origin-Bound Identity) defines the minimum structural conditions
under which an identity can exist as a non-replicable, traceable, and audit-verifiable
entity across systems.

An identity is valid only when it is bound to a verifiable origin and maintained through
continuous, non-overwriteable event history.


Base


This standard is based on the following principles:

  • Identity must be anchored to a verifiable origin event
  • Identity must be unique and non-replicable
  • Identity must not be overwriteable or transferable without trace
  • Identity must remain independent of platform-specific carriers
  • Identity must be maintained through continuous event-based history

Core Conditions


An OBIDENITY™-compatible identity MUST satisfy:

  • existence of a unique identity anchor
  • binding to a defined origin event
  • continuous, append-only lifecycle
  • traceable responsibility and event history
  • ability to reconstruct identity state at any point in time

Validity Rule


If identity origin, continuity, or traceability cannot be verified:

→ the identity is considered invalid or unknown


Scope


This standard applies to:

  • digital identities
  • AI systems and agents
  • organizations and governance entities
  • datasets and models
  • physical assets as referenced identities

Institutional Position


OBIDENITY™ does not replace legal identity systems or identification documents.

It defines a structural identity layer enabling traceability, auditability, and
interoperability across systems.


Structural Principle

Identity is not defined by registration.
Identity is defined by origin and continuity.


Closing Statement

An identity that cannot prove where it came from and how it evolved does not exist
as a valid entity.


Module Architecture

→ Module 1 — Identity Anchor
→ Module 2 — Identity Continuity
→ Module 3 — Chain of Control
→ Module 4 — Identity Integrity
→ Module 5 — Identity State

Related Documents

→ About OBIDENITY Standard
→ OBIDENITY — Identity in Practice
→ OBIDENITY — Business Model & Licensing
→ OBIDENITY Identity Governance Rules