New York Post

Driver’s licenses in iPhone wallets

- Theo Wayt

Apple is rolling out a feature in eight states that will let users store digital versions of their driver’s licenses and other state IDs in their iPhone wallets.

The US Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion plans to accept IDs stored on iPhones at “select airport security checkpoint­s” in “participat­ing airports,” Apple added without providing specifics.

Arizona and Georgia residents will have access to the feature first, followed by Connecticu­t, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Oklahoma and Utah. Apple did not provide an exact release date.

“We are already in discussion­s with many more states as we’re working to offer this nationwide in the future,” said the company’s vice president of Apple Pay and Apple Wallet, Jennifer Bailey.

The feature — which will require users to scan their IDs and snap verificati­on selfies — bolsters Apple’s mobile-wallet feature, which already lets users store other documents like credit cards, student IDs and boarding passes on their iPhones. Apple is also planning to let users store corporate IDs and home, apartment and hotel keys through its wallet feature “soon,” according to the company.

Apple said it built the driver’s-license feature with “privacy at the forefront” — but many privacy and civil-liberties advocates are skeptical.

“By making it more convenient to show ID and thus easier to ask for it, digital IDs would inevitably make demands for ID more frequent in American life,” activists from the Electronic Frontier Foundation wrote in July, arguing that frequent ID checks would erode privacy and diminish “the ability to engage in constituti­onally protected anonymous speech.”

Nilay Patel, the editor-in-chief of tech site The Verge, also said Apple’s ID feature is ripe for abuse by law enforcemen­t.

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