Will we “accidentally” walk into the digital ID system? t.co/1FSTKUZhpd pic.twitter.com/VrLq2y5TYT
— DrRay (@DrNoMask) August 25, 2024
Report: Biden Administration Rushes Digital ID Plans
The Biden administration is working to expedite widespread adoption of digital IDs, including driver’s licenses, a draft executive order indicates.
Digital IDs are a contentious concept primarily because of the concentration of – eventually – the entirety of people’s sensitive private information in centralized databases controlled by the government, and on people’s phones, “client-side.”
That in turn brings up the issues of technical security, but also privacy, and the potential for dystopian-style mass surveillance.
Proponents, on the other hand, like to focus on the “convenience” that such a shift from physical to digital personal documents is promised to bring.
In the US, some states have started this process via digital driver’s licenses, and the executive order is urging (“strongly encouraging”) both federal and state authorities to accelerate this, as well as other types of digital ID.
Where this policy seems to be converging to is coming up, at long last, with a functional way to carry out online identity verification. Namely, digital ID would be combined with biometric data obtained through facial recognition, and other forms of biometrics harvesting.
Centralization of data – opponents say to better control it, even if that makes it less secure – is a key component of these schemes, and so the Biden executive order speaks about making it obligatory for federal agencies to join “a single government-run identity system, Login.gov,” reports say.
reclaimthenet.org/report-biden-administration-rushes-digital-id-plans
TODAY, our Digital Welfare State & Human Rights Project launches a new report entitled: Paving a Digital Road to Hell? A Primer on the Role of the World Bank and Global Networks in Promoting Digital ID. pic.twitter.com/nvXcK81hCO
— NYU Center for Human Rights & Global Justice (@humanrightsnyu) June 17, 2022
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