The Digital Social Contract: Protecting Identity in the Age of AI
Description
Digital identity has become one of the most pressing governance challenges of the 21st century. This paper argues that digital identity is not optional but inevitable, driven by four converging forces: privacy leakage, AI synthesis, corporate capture, and geopolitical vulnerability. Drawing on political philosophy (Rousseau, Rawls, Foucault, Habermas), comparative case analysis (Estonia, India, China), and emerging technical frameworks (zero-knowledge proofs, decentralized identity), the paper analyzes the opportunities and perils of digital ID systems. It proposes a Digital Social Contract as the normative and institutional framework for governing them. The paper concludes that the decisive question is not whether digital IDs will exist, but how they will be governed — and that only a robust Digital Social Contract, grounded in democratic legitimacy, institutional accountability, and adaptive governance, can ensure that digital identity serves citizens rather than controls them.
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Digital_Social_Contract_v3.pdf
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