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iddianame

Iddianame is a term used in discussions of digital identity to describe a composite personal identifier intended to balance recognizability with privacy. An iddianame typically combines a person’s legally registered name with a stable, unique value that persists across systems, enabling cross-system recognition while limiting exposure of full personal data.

Etymology: The word appears to be a portmanteau of “ID” and “name,” with possible influences from European

Structure and usage: In practical designs, an iddianame may consist of the readable name paired with an

Applications: Governments, financial services, education, and social platforms explore iddianames to enable cross-system service delivery, reduce

Challenges: Key concerns include privacy, consent, governance, data minimization, and the risk of data fusion that

See also: digital identity, unique identifier, identity management, privacy by design.

naming
conventions.
It
is
not
widely
standardized
and
may
be
used
variably
in
academic
or
industry
discussions.
underlying
token,
hash,
or
other
non-public
identifier
that
links
records
across
services.
Some
implementations
separate
the
name
from
the
linkage
value
to
improve
privacy,
while
others
embed
a
hashed
or
pseudonymous
form
of
the
name
for
verification
purposes.
The
goal
is
to
provide
a
stable
identifier
that
supports
identity
verification
and
service
eligibility
without
revealing
excessive
personal
data.
credential
duplication,
and
simplify
user
onboarding.
They
are
proposed
as
a
means
to
maintain
continuity
of
identity
across
platforms
while
supporting
data
minimization
and
consent-oriented
access.
could
re-identify
individuals.
There
is
no
universally
accepted
standard,
leading
to
interoperability
challenges
and
divergent
implementation
practices.