Space object identification is vital for operating spacecraft, space traffic control, and space situational awareness, but initial determination, maintenance, and recovery of identity are all difficult, expensive, and error prone, especially for small objects like CubeSats. Attaching a beacon or license plate with a unique identification number to a space object before launch would greatly simplify the task, but radio beacons are power hungry and can cause interference. This Paper describes a new concept for a satellite license plate: the extremely low resource optical identifier. The extremely low resource optical identifier is a milliwatt-scale self-powered autonomous optical beacon that can be attached to any space object to transmit a persistent identification signal to ground stations. A system appropriate for a low-Earth-orbit CubeSat or other small space object can fit in a package with the area of a postage stamp and a few millimeters thick; and it requires no power, data, or control from the host object. The concept has been validated with ground tests, and the first flight-test unit is scheduled for launch in 2018. The unique identification number of a low-Earth-orbit satellite can be determined unambiguously in a single orbital pass over a low-cost ground station.