The 2119 words MUST and MAY are used to signify requirements; although that does imply interoperability as well. This statement is associated with making the verification code functional, since the verification code represents a signed and typed verification pointer, it must point to something.

I don't understand why. The code is a signed token. Imagine the registry goes back to the signer asks about token 123-foo666 and the answer is "We're the Ministry, we signed it, of course it's valid. The details are secret."

While that would not be my favorite way to work, and I can easily imagine other scenarios with auditing and transparency business requirements, why wouldn't that interoperate?

Regards,
John Levine, jo...@taugh.com, Taughannock Networks, Trumansburg NY
Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. https://jl.ly

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