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:

  • static snapshots
  • duplicated data
  • each form self-contained
  • trust tied to the whole document

Example:
PD A1 includes employer details, worker details, status, dates, identifiers, etc.


Fact/attestation model

Authoritative source → attestation → verifiable claim → selective presentation

Characteristics:

  • modular
  • reusable
  • machine-interpretable
  • trust tied to specific claims

Example:

Instead of sending a PD A1 document:

  • Claim: worker covered by social security of country X
  • Claim: employer identifier
  • Claim: posting period

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:

  • identity
  • address
  • organisation details
  • dates
  • identifiers

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:

  • issue once
  • reuse many times
  • verify cryptographically

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:

  • Is worker still insured?
  • Is employer still registered?
  • Is permit still valid?

That moves systems from snapshots → live trust checks.


3️⃣ Administrative friction reduction

Cross-border processes are slow mainly because:

  • information cannot be trusted
  • documents must be interpreted
  • manual checks dominate

Fact-based attestations allow:

  • automatic verification
  • less interpretation
  • less resubmission

5. What Mikael diplomatically avoids saying

There is an implicit but important point.

Even many “digital” systems today are still document systems.

Examples:

  • PDFs in portals
  • XML forms
  • EESSI structured forms

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:

  • employer
  • labour authority
  • social security authority

Semantic interoperability

What exactly does a claim mean?

Example:

“employed”

Different definitions in:

  • tax law
  • labour law
  • social security law

This is why his Semantics Group work is critical.


Liability and trust

If a credential is wrong:

Who is responsible?

  • issuer
  • holder
  • verifier
  • wallet provider

7. How this fits the bigger architectural change

The real transformation is this:

Old model
Emerging model
documents
credentials
form exchange
claim verification
static snapshots
reusable attestations
manual checks
machine trust
silo data
portable facts

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

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