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Does Europe fully enough understand the opportunity?
The first step in the trust infrastructure is the shift from exchanging documents to information exchange with European Business Wallets - interacting with interoperable personal wallets.
The next step is to use these as control panels for AI-agents. Together becoming the New Execution Layer for the Single Market.
Here comments about the first step - based on post by Mikael after Hällström (lead for Semantics Group in WeBuild) https://www.linkedin.com/posts/mikaelafhallstrom_webuild-ebw-verifiablecredentials-activity-7438627776536023040-nXEL?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAAABPj1oB9_D7YNYACmHvY9HioUqpuULqZCo:
1. The key conceptual shift: documents → attestations → facts
“the real shift is not about digitising forms — it is about moving from document exchange to fact-based information exchange.”
That is exactly the transition from the “document paradigm” to the “data/claim paradigm.”
Traditional model
Process → form → document → transmission → manual interpretation
Characteristics:
Example:
PD A1 includes employer details, worker details, status, dates, identifiers, etc.
Fact/attestation model
Authoritative source → attestation → verifiable claim → selective presentation
Characteristics:
Example:
Instead of sending a PD A1 document:
Each can come from the authoritative issuer.
2. Why the old system duplicated everything
Mikael explains the root cause well:
each form must stand on its own.
That is the paper inheritance problem.
A paper document must include all context, because the receiver cannot assume anything else.
So every form repeats:
This leads to:
same fact
→ copied into 10 documents
→ slightly modified
→ becomes inconsistent
That is the core administrative friction in cross-border processes.
3. What wallets + verifiable credentials actually enable
The real change is separation of facts from context.
Instead of one big document:
PD A1 document
└─ employer
└─ worker
└─ address
└─ insurance status
└─ dates
You get modular attestations:
Credential: Employer identity
Credential: Worker identity
Credential: Social security coverage
Credential: Posting period
And the verifier asks for only what is needed.
Example:
A labour inspector may only need:
social_security_coverage = true
country = FI
valid_until = date
Not the whole PD A1 document.
4. Where Mikael’s post is particularly strong
Three points are very well positioned.
1️⃣ Once-Only Principle becomes technically real
For years it was a policy slogan.
VC + wallet finally provides the mechanism:
2️⃣ Continuous compliance becomes possible
This is a very important implication he hints at.
Today:
compliance = submit document
Future:
compliance = verify current state
For example:
That moves systems from snapshots → live trust checks.
3️⃣ Administrative friction reduction
Cross-border processes are slow mainly because:
Fact-based attestations allow:
5. What Mikael diplomatically avoids saying
There is an implicit but important point.
Even many “digital” systems today are still document systems.
Examples:
They are digitised documents, not shared facts.
So the architecture is still:
form → send → interpret
Instead of:
claim → verify
6. Where the real difficulty lies (not mentioned in the post)
The hardest problems are not technical.
They are:
Governance
Who is allowed to issue a claim?
Example:
“employer_of_worker”
Possible issuers:
Semantic interoperability
What exactly does a claim mean?
Example:
“employed”
Different definitions in:
This is why his Semantics Group work is critical.
Liability and trust
If a credential is wrong:
Who is responsible?
7. How this fits the bigger architectural change
The real transformation is this:
The wallet is not the revolution itself.
It is the transport layer for trusted claims.
**8. **The EU digital wallet will not simply digitise documents — it will gradually replace them with portable, verifiable facts issued by authoritative sources.
And EBWs enable AI-agentics: https://www.webuildconsortium.eu/trusted-identities-for-ai-agents-an-opportunity-for-europe