PHASE ONE
This will be the initial research phase of this project with the goal being to provide a roadmap, a MVP, and documentation about developing a working implementation at an university.
Update 3/15/22: The more I continue to research this, the more it seems this proposal will look to other projects, such as RootsWallet (<https://cardano.ideascale.com/c/profile/3092424>), to see about utilizing other open source efforts along with our own, and help expand upon other projects if we can by sharing information and collaborating. Our goal is to provide a repo and other forms of documentation to help an U.S. University handle incoming immigration documents that need verification from the University they are to attend.
The focus at first are immigration advisors at U.S. Universities that would use a homegrown developed system that could grab documents and credentials from a blockchain and decentralized cloud file storage system akin to IPFS, allow these advisors to then confirm the information in a "document check" phase, and then have the life cycle of this data exist for the duration of stay, until their SEVIS (Student and Exchange Visitor Information System used in the U.S. for immigration compliance) program ends, and a grace period thereafter.
As opposed to focusing on a project that just develops this very end solution of itself: this phase of this project is just to research how best to go forward to develop the end solution. This solution should be open source so that colleges like M.I.T. can not only use it for their own solutions, but then contribute back to the project for it to begin to support its own life cycle.
The set of deliverables is publicly available document(s), relevant code, and public GitHub repos. KPIs are in the form of how useable these materials are to begin development by Atala PRISM and Plutus developers, and then also International Education offices and their IT support staff.
A survey to these stakeholders and volunteers about how useful this research is, how much it assisted with their development, how many hours of development/research did it save, and ultimately did this project help them produce an end solution for their international immigration document verification? These are the end results of this project everyone should expect.
The challenge is in the development. The Linux Foundation, Jim St. Clair, and many others have faced HIPAA compliance concerns, and this will concern FERPA compliance. Basically: how private can we make this decentralized approach to be? How to we improve over the current methods, and how? What are the established solutions already presented commercially by https://iamx.id/ , others, and how can our open source solution offer the same features and support that is community based?