Big Four accounting firm Deloitte has announced its integration with KILT Protocol, a Polkadot-based parachain, to enhance its Know Your Customer (KYC) and Know Your Business (KYB) verification processes. The integration aims to streamline identity verification by issuing reusable digital credentials to customers, significantly improving operational factors.
According to a press release shared with CryptoDaily, Deloitte's integration of KILT Protocol technology into its verification processes aims to improve efficiency, reduce redundancy, and enhance data privacy. The reusable digital credentials enabled by this integration will have applications across various sectors, including banking, DeFi, e-commerce, and more.
KYC and KYB processes in the past have often involved paper-based certificates and require multiple data points for identity verification, leading to increased workloads and inefficiencies. These methods also pose a risk to consumer data privacy as personal information is stored across multiple platforms and databases. By integrating with the KILT Protocol, Deloitte seeks to address such issues by allowing its customers to store their verification credentials in a single digital wallet.
The digital credentials will then be applicable across various use cases, including regulatory compliance for banking and decentralized finance (DeFi), age verification for e-commerce, private logins, and fundraising. At the time of writing, however, Deloitte has not disclosed specific capacities and technical information for these use cases.
The wallet, in the form of a browser extension, will be stored on the customer's device and remain under their control at all times. Customers may also choose which data points to share and with whom they share their credentials. Deloitte claims that its customer base would not need any prior knowledge in blockchain-based technologies to make use of the new features.
Notably, Deloitte has disclosed that it will retain the authority to revoke credentials using the parachain if a customer's circumstances change after the credential was issued. Tthe credentials are also digitally signed by Deloitte, ensuring authenticity and reliability.
KILT Protocol founder Ingo Rübe emphasized the benefits of the streamlined identity solutions built on KILT, allowing customers to use verifiable digital credentials across multiple services while maintaining control over when and where to share personal information. He also noted that KILT, as a Polkadot parachain, offers the scale and security required by enterprise partners.
1/ @DeloitteCH - the world’s biggest accounting firm - is the latest major enterprise partner to come to the Polkadot ecosystem, choosing cutting-edge tech provided by the @Kiltprotocol parachain to enhance its identity protocols. pic.twitter.com/nkqr0i1s0I
— Polkadot (@Polkadot) May 4, 2023
KILT Protocol's solution works by eliminating trust processes for real-world credentials like passports and driver's licenses to the digital world while maintaining data privacy and control. Built over Polkadot, KILT allows users to claim various characteristics about themselves and present these claims to trusted entities called "attesters." If an attester considers the claim to be true, they can certify it and hand the certificate to the user, known as the "claimer." The certificate's hash value is then stored on the KILT blockchain.
The claimer may then present the certificate to the services they wish to use, and the verifier of a service can check the validity of the certificate by comparing it to the blockchain's hash. As attesters are not involved in the verification process, the claimer's behavior remains unknown, and the claimer can even hide sensitive data that is not necessary for verification. This system ensures that users have full data sovereignty, as they are in control of their certificates.
This announcement comes shortly after reports on April 26 that Deloitte had over 300 crypto-related job opportunities available, with most of them being posted within the same week. In contrast, searches for crypto-related job openings at other Big Four accounting firms—Ernst & Young, KPMG, and PricewaterhouseCoopers—yielded no results.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.