Florida Could Become First State To Offer Digital Driver's Licenses (wesh.com) 55
According to WESH Orlando, Florida residents next year will be able to apply for new mobile driver's licenses that can be easily accessed on a smartphone, tablet, or other device. They will be valid as a traditional license. From the report: The service will be provided by the company Thales, which designs and builds electrical systems and provides services for the aerospace, defense, transportation and security markets. "The State of Florida will be the first state in the United States to provide mobile Driver Licenses with leading-edge security mechanisms, fully compliant with rigorous national and international standards.," a statement from Thales said.
According to Thales, a digital license will work the same way as a traditional one. People would open the app and present it to verify your age, check in at TSA or interact with law enforcement. As of now, though, Thales states on their website, "It will be up to each state and local law enforcement agency to determine what procedure and methods work best within their existing protocol." It's unclear exactly when Florida will begin offering the mobile licenses.
According to Thales, a digital license will work the same way as a traditional one. People would open the app and present it to verify your age, check in at TSA or interact with law enforcement. As of now, though, Thales states on their website, "It will be up to each state and local law enforcement agency to determine what procedure and methods work best within their existing protocol." It's unclear exactly when Florida will begin offering the mobile licenses.
Shouldn't he be paying US? (Score:1)
Given that he whores off our privacy and data to basically thieves.
OK, I'd still not take it, even for money. Rights don't have a price.
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Who?
Do we really want this? (Score:5, Insightful)
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What's the bet the licence app is 'always on', recording audio and tracking location and other meta-data.
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on the obama phone with free data
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on the obama phone with free data
You mean the Bush phone [snopes.com]? Or perhaps the Wilson phone [factcheck.org]?
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I already have the choice to make my credit cards, transit passes, gift cards, automobile insurance, loyalty/membership cards, boarding passes, emergency medical information, and who knows what else available to view without needing to unlock my iPhone first (though actually using any of those to pay would require more, of course). A driver’s license arguably has less sensitive information on it than a number of those other items. So long as it remains a choice, as those others are, and is integrated
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You already handed over your phone by virtue of having their application....
The physical version is a moot point.
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If this ever gets to the mandatory stage in my state, I'll buy a cheap handset just to keep my drivers license on.
You believe at some point it would be mandatory that you must own a smartphone to store your license? Well, that's certainly not happening in Florida - it's not even mandatory here that your vehicle be completely functional (seriously, we don't have vehicle inspections).
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Maybe it can be in a mode where it doesn't unlock the phone fully.
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The fact that you have to unlock your phone to use the digital ID to prove your identity while being detained by the police is a deal-breaker even if the app doesn't technically require you to hand over the phone. What guarantee do you have that they won't suddenly seize the phone after you've unlocked it? The safe thing to do is to leave all your devices locked and present a separate, physical ID card.
Anyway, what are you going to do if your phone dies or this app malfunctions while you're driving, or othe
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However, I think it's mostly intended to be helpful in verifying who you are to someone else.
I.E. I have the option to turn on/off items which are available to whomever scans the QR code: My Portrait, License Status (valid vs not), Age, Name, License Number.
So imagine you're a female entering a club with a bouncer at the door. You can have it show him your fa
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I could always give them someone else name with a similar look.
God no, I do not want to reach for a phone (Score:2)
Re:Do we really want this? (Score:4, Informative)
You get pulled over for a traffic violation and you now have to unlock your phone and hand it to the officer. Not something I'd care to do. If this ever gets to the mandatory stage in my state, I'll buy a cheap handset just to keep my drivers license on. No SIM card, no access to my texts, call history, files, contacts or anything.
So... I have no idea what Florida is planning, but a mobile DL, implemented properly, should absolutely not work like this. In particular you should never hand your phone over to the officer. Also, I'll note that Colorado and Louisiana already have (bad, non-ISO) mDLs, so Florida is not the first.
To provide a little context to what follows: I'm the tech lead and manager of the team that is building mobile DL (and other identity credential support) for Android, and I'm also a member of the ISO 18013-5 committee that is defining the international standard for mDL and a member of the ISO 23220 committee which is defining more generalized mobile identity credentials (based largely on the 18013-5 work). I'm also considering joining the ISO committee working on mobile passports, though these committees are a lot of work and require a lot of travel and three may be too much, so I'm hesitating.
So, the way that 18013-5 mDLs work is:
1. You begin a "device engagement" with the officer's device either via QR (your phone displays the QR code and the officer's devices' camera captures it) or NFC tap (tap your phone to the back of the officer's phone -- note that this is awkward in practice, I think NFC engagement will primarily be used for presentation to a device on a pedestal, e.g. TSA security in the airport).
2. The QR/NFC does not transfer any data about you. It transfers an ephemeral public key and some information about what communications channel your device would like to use. The options are NFC (only if NFC was used to begin the engagement), WifiAware or Bluetooth.
3. The officer's device (called the "verifier" in the standard) generates its own ephemeral public key, performs ECDH to derive a session key, then sends an encrypted, authenticated request via the wireless channel indicated by your device. Note that the session encryption is layered on top of transport-layer security provided by Wifi or Bluetooth. The verifier may also sign the request with a private key, to identify and authenticate itself as official. I suspect that this will be rare in practice.
4. Your device receives the verifier public key, computes the session key and decrypts and verifies the request, validating the signature, if any (using its store of authorized public keys to know if the verifier is official). It then looks at the data that was requested. It may be that some data elements on your DL are pre-approved (by you) and others require you to approve. If necessary, the mDL app will prompt you to indicate whether you approve the data release. It should allow you to select which data elements to release. In the case of a police officer, you'll probably want to provide everything. In the case of a bar, which only needs age verification, you won't.
5. Your device provides the requested and approved data element values to the verifier via the RF channel, encrypted and authenticated, of course. It also sends a "Mobile Security Object" (MSO) which is a list of randomized hashes of the data element values, signed by the issuer. The per-data element random seeds used in the hashing are provided with the requested/approved data elements, non-requested or non-approved data element seeds are not provided, so the verifier can't learn anything about the non-requested/non-approved data elements from your ID from the corresponding MSO hashes.
6. The verifier receives all of the above, checks the issuer signature on the MSO, hashes the received data elements and seeds, checks the resulting hashes against the MSO and if all is good displays the resulting data to the officer
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Nice As an Option (Score:2)
I would love to have this as an option. This shouldn't eliminate the physical card, but be allowed to be used instead. This would mean I wouldn't need to worry about grabbing my wallet when running out to pick up or drop off the kids, and I've had several times when I needed ID when I didn't have it on my (in Florida at Disney World, in fact).
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Louisiana in July [2018] became the first state to make digital licenses available to anyone who wants them, and at least 14 other states either have developed a program, run a pilot or are studying the possibility, according to the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators. https://www.governing.com/topi... [governing.com]
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Why have anything at all? (Score:4, Insightful)
The police already have a database of all cars and licenses. They have your photo etc. All you need to do is tell them your name.
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But this will encourage you to unlock your phone for them before they ask you to step out of the car.
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But this will encourage you to unlock your phone for them before they ask you to step out of the car.
It won't, actually, if it's done right [slashdot.org].
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That is interesting, and I hope your mDL standard is widely adopted, but I fully expect it won't be adopted by many (probably most) agencies for the reason I mentioned above. What is in it for them if they just need more equipment/software/training and gain no investigative benefit for themselves?
It's entirely possible those police chiefs don't want their officers handling Joe Businessman's shiny new Galaxy Fold, but if you are getting pulled over for driving while black, and maybe your phone already has a
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It's useful for when the system is down or unreachable for some reason. Also, the "something you have" aspect reinforces that you're the same person. Otherwise you could claim to be someone who looks like you, with a license you show that you have something that asserts it. It can do a key exchange protocol to verify authenticity offline.
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Not having your drivers license on you (Score:2)
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Slow down... (Score:2, Insightful)
Colorado has had this for a year, Florida is not the first to offer this witchcraft.
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Same with South Australia, they have had it for years.
Sorry but no! (Score:5, Insightful)
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If it's digital why would you need to hand it over at all? They have all your details already.
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I can only speak for the UK system but we don't have digitla licences (we still have a card), however:
If you rent a car, you're asked to generate a one-time code on the online digital driving license website.
That one-time code is only valid for a limited time, and can be plugged into various tools at the hire company that tell them that the driver is authorised to drive X type of vehicles, and any penalty points, restrictions, etc.
It doesn't give them access in perpetuity. It doesn't need you to hand over
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How is this going to work?
This is how it should work [slashdot.org].
Re:LMFTFY (Score:5, Informative)
Louisiana in July [2018] became the first [US] state to make digital licenses available to anyone who wants them, and at least 14 other states either have developed a program, run a pilot or are studying the possibility, according to the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators. https://www.governing.com/topi... [governing.com]
Alabama Started in 2015 (Score:1)
compliant with international standards (Score:1)
The thing is internationally a driver's license is nothing more than a license that allows the holder to drive certain kinds of vehicles.
Over here the only way to prove your identity to authorities is to show your ID card or your passport.
Re: compliant with international standards (Score:2)
See in the US most states wonâ(TM)t allow you to have a âoeState IDâ if you have a drivers license, as the DL is your ID if you can drive. Took me some getting used to to understand a separate ID from a drivers license for other countries. I guess that means you have to carry both on you, assuming you drive daily?
Meanwhile (Score:3)
No thanks (Score:2)
Puerto Rico has it (Score:1)
Bypass a warrant need for your phone? (Score:2)
So, a cop won't need a warrant to open your electronic device now?