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1 posted on 06/01/2021 11:23:05 PM PDT by Olog-hai
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To: Olog-hai
The digital identity wallet “can be used anywhere in the EU to identify and authenticate for access to services in the public and private sectors, allowing citizens to control what data is communicated and how it is used”, according to a Commission document reviewed by Reuters.

"Can" will soon transform into "must."

Regards,

2 posted on 06/01/2021 11:43:39 PM PDT by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: Olog-hai

Can/Will it be used for voting?


3 posted on 06/01/2021 11:46:53 PM PDT by Veggie Todd (Religion. It's like a History class. Without the facts. )
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To: Olog-hai

Is this the “self sovereign” ID?

The concept of SSID has been rattling around for a long time but the idea is, *you* decide what to put in *your* wallet, the supplier is mainly providing you with an almost empty wallet (the main content usually being some NIST/ISO level of authentication standard that your identity is definitely yours and not someone elses’.)

The digital wallet can then be used to assert “I am who I say I am” while also holding the necessary information an organization may test to confirm it, eg a biometric registration that’s been signed can be checked again and if the wallet is still in the hands of the natural owner it’ll say “scanned data matches stored data and stored data is signed”.

This will definitely freak out some privacy experts, especially those who can’t read good and don’t understand the tech or the standards involved, and who need tin hats all the time anyway.

But if it’s okay for the Federal Government to do it for checking employees, okay for Apple to do it for customer (and Apple is Made In China) and it’s okay for protecting healthcare information that YOU DECIDE to make portable for your healthcare provider AND ANY OTHER to access on their behalf in an emergency, opting out is just as open to a privacy/security/convenience debate as opting in.

Simple example - if you are involved in an accident and a paramedic has a NIST compliant biometric enabled single person use iPad and you have a digital wallet, the paramedics can tell who you are, who’s your insurer, what blood group you are and what medication you’re on /allergic to (IF YOU DECIDE TO REVEAL ALL THAT) simply by opening your digital wallet.

Pre-digital, how would a paramedic know who you are? Ooh, er... Maybe check if you’ve got a wallet? Look at your driver’s license?

If they look at your digital wallet there’s an audit trail: on this date and that time this specific paramedic opened your wallet to read only what you gave prior permission for them to read... You were unconscious at the time, and they needed to know which of 2 large hospitals near you is better. Not closer... Better.

Can the nondigital wallet do a tenth of that?

There’s going to be a huge paradigm shift in personal tin hat privacy nuttery over the next 25 years. It’s not “privacy Vs independence” so much as

“your privacy + your security + your right to know who’s accessed what”

Vs

“la la la, you’ll get the info you need to help me only if you can prise it out of my cold dead hands or if I’m conscious and in a really good mood when you ask me nicely.”


6 posted on 06/01/2021 11:58:55 PM PDT by MalPearce
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To: Olog-hai

>>The wallet will also enable qualified electronic signatures that can facilitate political participation

Electronic voting. The Left’s dream since the early 70s.

And not Just on candidates.


19 posted on 06/02/2021 7:47:20 AM PDT by a fool in paradise (Lean on Joe Biden to follow Donald Trump's example and donate his annual salary to charity.)
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