Mastercard has filed a patent for a Blockchain system to store and verify identity data, in an application[1] published by the U.S Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) April 12.
Mastercard states:
“Traditionally, proof [of identity] has been provided via government identification, credit cards, business cards…[such] proof may be inaccurate… or may be entirely fabricated in ways that may be difficult to identify… there is a need for a technical solution to provide for the immutable storage of identity and credential data.”
The patent continues to outline the ways in which the distributed storage of identity data on a Blockchain system can function to prevent such abuses. In only permitting authorised nodes to submit and update system data, the patent proposes a (semi-)private, rather than public, Blockchain solution.
MasterCard-approved nodes would require each entity to provide, as a minimum, a public key and a geographic jurisdiction in order to generate a data file. These “subordinate” entities would each be assigned a digital signature by a “superior” entity. A "hashing module” of MasterCard’s processing server would then generate an "identity value" for each entity and create a timestamped block, with a record of the most recent block added to the Blockchain.
In this way, the patent concludes, the Blockchain can function to “maintain a continuously growing list of data records hardened against tampering and revision.”
MasterCard submitted a Blockchain tech patent for instant payments[2] back in Nov. 2017, with its Blockchain system offering business-to-business payments[3] in place since Oct. 2017. Sunday, April 15, Cointelegraph reported[4] that MasterCard Ireland is recruiting 175 new employees in Dublin, with a specific appeal to Blockchain tech specialists.
Overall, the company appears to be staunch in its pro-Blockchain, anti-Bitcoin stance[5].