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Author Archives: Alberto Leon
Alberto Antonio Leon is a Senior Software Engineer at the Applied Social Media Lab (ASML) at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University. His work sits at the intersection of decentralized identity, trust infrastructure, and human agency in networked systems.
Alberto architects and builds privacy-preserving digital trust systems that enable people—not platforms—to hold, present, and verify credentials about themselves and their relationships. At ASML, he leads core engineering efforts around wallet-based identity architectures, Verifiable Credentials, and the development of Verifiable Relationship Credentials (VRCs), helping pioneer new models for portable trust on the social web.
His work contributes directly to the First Person Project (FPP), where he supports the technical architecture of new forms of decentralized, human-centered trust frameworks. Through this collaboration, he helps shape the evolution of relationship-based credentials, social graph attestations, and next-generation Web of Trust models designed to restore human agency in digital environments.
Alberto is actively engaged with the Linux Foundation’s Decentralized Trust ecosystem and broader standards communities, contributing to discussions and implementations that advance interoperable identity protocols. He participates in industry efforts shaping credential exchange standards, hardware-backed trust mechanisms, and peer-to-peer verification models. His focus is on building systems that are both technically rigorous and socially grounded.
Across his work, trust is the unifying principle. Alberto designs architectures that combine:
-Verifiable Credentials and relationship attestations
-Privacy-preserving age and attribute verification
-Wallet-based peer-to-peer exchanges
-Hardware-backed key security and attestation
-Standards-aligned interoperability across ecosystems
He is particularly interested in reimagining the Web of Trust for the modern internet—moving from centralized reputation systems toward cryptographically verifiable, human-mediated trust networks. His engineering work informs and supports technical policy conversations about governance, digital identity, and the future of social infrastructure.
In addition to building systems, Alberto contributes to public-facing writing and technical policy posts grounded in real-world engineering practice. He helps translate complex protocol work into accessible discussions about digital trust, sovereignty, and responsible infrastructure design.
Alberto holds an engineering degree from Tecnológico de Monterrey (Tec de Monterrey), where he developed the technical foundation that informs his work at the intersection of distributed systems, security, and applied cryptography.
At its core, his work is about restoring agency to individuals in digital systems—building infrastructure where trust is portable, relationships are verifiable, and identity is user-controlled.
