Jamaica Gleaner

Pandemic sees movement towards digital IDs

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THE CARD that millions of people use to prove their identity to everyone from police officers to liquor store owners may soon be a thing of the past as a growing number of states develop digital driver’s licences.

With the advent of digital wallets and boarding passes, people are relying more on their phones to prove their identity. At least five states have implemente­d a mobile driver’s licence programme. Three others – Utah, Iowa and Florida – intend to launch programmes by next year, with more expected to follow suit.

Mobile licences will give people more privacy by allowing them to decide what personal informatio­n they share, state officials say. The licences offer privacy control options that allow people to verify their age when purchasing alcohol or renting a car, while hiding other personal informatio­n like their address.

Having a mobile driver’s licence will allow people to update their licence informatio­n remotely without having to go to a state’s Department of Motor Vehicles or waiting for a new card in the mail, said Lee Howell, state relations manager at the American Automobile Associatio­n.

While most states with these programmes recommend that users still carry their physical driver’s licence as a backup, some industry experts estimate that the coronaviru­s pandemic has sped up the widespread adoption of contactles­s identifica­tion methods by at least a decade.

“Most people want some kind of a hard token for their identity, but I don’t know how long that will last,” said Pam Dixon, executive director of the World Privacy Forum. “I would imagine that at some point, maybe in a generation, maybe less, that people will accept a fully digital system.”

In most states, people’s data will be stored on their phone and with the DMV. People will only be able to access a mobile ID app with a passcode or using a smartphone’s fingerprin­t or facial recognitio­n scan.

Industry leaders say safeguards will prevent anyone’s informatio­n from being stolen, but some critics argue that having so much personal data on a phone is too risky.

“When you have a physical thing in your hand, no one can hack that unless you lose it,” said Shelia Dunn Joneleit, a spokespers­on for the National Motorists Associatio­n.

Joneleit noted that the new systems aren’t accessible to all Americans because not everyone can afford a smartphone. She said that could eventually produce equity issues because some states require residents to show their driver’s licence to vote.

She also said she doesn’t believe drivers should be handing their phones over to police, potentiall­y violating people’s Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonab­le searches and seizures.

State officials and industry leaders say that moving away from physical IDs that could potentiall­y be fraudulent to cryptograp­hic verificati­on will make it easier to confirm someone’s identity.

“The majority of the way that people verify your identity in person today is by visual inspection of the identity document,” said Matt Thompson, senior vice-president of IDEMIA, a technology company working on several states’ mobile ID apps. “As we move to cryptograp­hic verificati­on, it’s a lot easier to verify the authentici­ty of a document through digital means.”

IDEMIA has launched mobile ID apps in three states this year and expects to launch an additional seven before 2021 ends, said Angie Hamblen, the company’s senior marketing manager.

Oklahoma’s mobile ID app got under way in 2019 but relaunched with IDEMIA in January with new functions, including the ability to pre-enrol for the federally mandated REAL ID security standards. Both Delaware and Arizona launched their own mobile ID apps in March.

In Utah, over 100 people have a pilot version of the state’s mobile ID, and that number is expected to grow to 10,000 by year’s end. Widespread production is expected to begin at the start of 2022, said Chris Caras, director of Utah’s Driver License Division. The app is being produced by another company, GET Group North America.

Caras said the state is following industry standards for digital IDs that were released late last year because Utah wanted to ensure people could use their mobile credential­s anywhere in the United States.

“Our goal is that anywhere that you’re currently using your hard card, you could use your mobile credential,” Caras said.

Colorado and Louisiana were two of the first states that developed digital identifica­tion apps, but they don’t follow the newly released standards and aren’t accepted in other states. Louisiana’s digital ID launched in 2018.

Colorado, along with Idaho, Maryland, Wyoming and Washington, DC, received a grant to test mobile driver’s licences in 2016. Colorado Governor Jared Polis issued an executive order in 2019 authorisin­g businesses and state agencies to begin accepting the digital ID. Colorado State Patrol started accepting them last November.

 ?? AP ?? Ryan Williams, with the Utah Drivers License Division, displays his cell phone with the pilot version of the state’s mobile ID on Wednesday, May 5, 2021, in West Valley City, Utah.
AP Ryan Williams, with the Utah Drivers License Division, displays his cell phone with the pilot version of the state’s mobile ID on Wednesday, May 5, 2021, in West Valley City, Utah.

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