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Description
Portable Identity examines how modern individuals become dependent on institutions, platforms, titles, and visibility for their sense of self, work, and reputation. The book treats identity as a system rather than a story, showing how names, roles, and recognition are borrowed, controlled, and revoked by external structures. It explores how reputation can survive context changes, how visibility increases exposure, and how individuals can design an identity that remains stable across countries, roles, and institutional boundaries. This is not a guide to branding or self-promotion, but a framework for carrying identity, trust, and professional continuity without being owned by any single system. Abdelfattah Ragab is a senior software engineer focused on designing and building software systems that must operate reliably at scale and evolve over time. His work spans system architecture, performance, reliability, and long-term maintainability across modern web and backend technologies.He has experience working on complex production systems where correctness, clarity, and responsible decision-making matter more than short-term trends or tools. His writing focuses on helping experienced engineers develop stronger mental models, architectural judgment, and the ability to reason about tradeoffs in real-world software systems.Abdelfattah writes for professionals who are responsible not just for delivering features, but for shaping systems that must remain understandable, adaptable, and trustworthy as requirements and teams change.



