Germany To Let Citizens Store ID Cards On Smartphone (apnews.com) 95
Germany says its citizens will be able to use smartphones to store their government-issued ID cards and prove their identity online. The Associated Press reports: The Interior Ministry said Wednesday that from this fall, citizens will be able to use the electronic ID stored in their smartphones together with a PIN number to prove they are who they claim to be when communicating with authorities or private businesses. Separately, the ministry said the Cabinet has agreed on a bill that will make government-generated data openly available to businesses and private individuals where possible, to spur the development of new applications.
Germans are frequently required to present credit card-sized cards featuring their photo and personal details, such as when applying for benefits, opening bank accounts or registering a vehicle. While there are already ways of doing this online, the physical card and a card reader are currently required.
Germans are frequently required to present credit card-sized cards featuring their photo and personal details, such as when applying for benefits, opening bank accounts or registering a vehicle. While there are already ways of doing this online, the physical card and a card reader are currently required.
Sell more cell phones (Score:3)
And the next step will be outright requiring cell phones because everyone loves their cell phone so darn much.
Re:Sell more cell phones (Score:5, Interesting)
And the next step will be outright requiring cell phones because everyone loves their cell phone so darn much.
They aren't required now? Around here you have to call when you arrive at a lot of doctors and dentist offices before they'll even let you in.
How would you do that without a cell phone?
Oh Nate you stupid, stupid man. (Score:2, Funny)
Have you not heard of a PAY PHONE? Duh! Just call from there.
Re: (Score:2)
I haven't seen a pay-phone downtown in almost a decade.... They just stopped being profitable a long time ago.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Pony Express.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And where do you think they turn to during a toilet paper shortage?
The white or yellow pages?
Re: (Score:2)
Around here the company that owned the pay-phones was also a major cell provider so they discontinued the pay-phones to make more people get cell phones. That was fifteen years ago.
Land-lines started to get discontinued ten years ago, and are now available only in major cities.
Re: (Score:1)
knock on the damn door, works great
Re: Sell more cell phones (Score:2)
Until they tell you âoefuck off you donâ(TM)t have an appointment.â
Re: (Score:1)
My my aren't you an extreme introvert trying to come up with excuses not to interact with another human.
You give your name and tell them about the appointment you made, is that so hard?
Are you 12?
Re: (Score:2)
"They aren't required now? Around here you have to call when you arrive at a lot of doctors and dentist offices before they'll even let you in."
How cute, I do the very same in my home.
Re: (Score:2)
More and more I make it5 a point to leave my cell phone at home when I can, etc.
I haven't found it holds me back from anything yet....and when I get to Dr.s office, most all still let me in just normally, it is just that they now schedule better so as not to have a waiting room filled with people.
But I suppose if I had do
India does it already (Score:5, Informative)
Indian government provides a cloud based app called digilocker which holds your Driving license etc. It is legally permissible to present it in lieu of papers. I suppose good news from India normally doesn't reach west.
Re:India does it already (Score:5, Informative)
Portugal does it already also, since two years ago. ID card, Driving License, and a few other documents, in a Android/IOS app. The app also generates QR codes traceable to a government online service so that another user of the app can verify the authenticity of the document in a centralized fashion, so it's basically impossible to falsify the document.
Re: India does it already (Score:2)
it's basically impossible to falsify the document. Until such a time as someone makes an app which screencaps the QR code and inserts falsified text and photo.
Re: (Score:3)
It's not complicated:
1. Your app to government online service: Give me a one-time-code to view my ID.
2. Government online service to you app: Here's a random one-time-code, valid for 10 minutes
3. Your app to other app: Here's a QR of the code.
4. Other app to government online service: Can I view the ID associated with this code?
5. Government online service to other app: Here's the ID matching that code (including a photo).
The UK uses a similar scheme for driving licenses, so car hire companies can check you
Re:India does it already (Score:4, Insightful)
The reasons should be readily apparent.
Re: (Score:2)
I think Denmark introduced such a system 20 years ago. Germany is generally not on the forefront of new technology.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
And the physical ID card of Germany already has a chip and provides certain digital functionality. Thus it is a digital ID (of sorts).
The *azis had pieces of flair that they made the J (Score:2)
The *azis had pieces of flair that they made the Jews wear.
It's a great idea! (Score:2)
Papers, please! (Score:1)
Papers, please! Whole new level of Thought Police coming now that people can be positively identified online. You think China's Social Credit Score is bad, the Germans will take it to a whole new level.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
What could possibly go wrong?!
The US could fall further behind the rest of the world, and become a place where tourists visit to experience how life was in the 20th century.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Yes. WW1. The Spanish Flu. WW2 with the Holocaust and atom bombs being dropped onto two cities. The Soviet Union. The Cold War with all the scare of total nuclear annihilation. All the proxy wars around the Cold War. Good times! And while the 21st century has that pandemic thing down already, it has some other catching up to do where wars and genocide in the Western world are concerned.
You are replying to an eye witness: I spent 2/3 of my life in the 20th Century: it was hands down better from nearly any perspective that I'm aware of. The quality of life and the opportunities to improve one's situation were leaps and bounds better than what the shitshow known as the New Millenium has provided to us. Also, your laser- like focus on the most tragic occurrences of the last century is a bit one- sided, don't you think? In regard to "catching up", there is plenty of time left for Century 21 t
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Probably nothing. What goes wrong right now when people lose their ID cards? Also very little.
Re: (Score:1)
Probably nothing. What goes wrong right now when people lose their ID cards? Also very little.
A solid point. My reluctance to climb on board with the E-ID (or, Apple's inevitable "iD") is based on the fact that it is stored on an Internet- connected device that contains known and unknown security holes. My wallet doesn't have any of those vulnerabilities. BTW, if you're reading this, Apple: I claim all rights to the moniker "iD", but I will sell them to you for a reasonable price ;-)
Wait people actually store personal (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
You trust a piece of leather more than a small digital safe with encryption?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
If I am stopped by the police, I can take my ID out and hand it to them. Having it on a phone is the equivalent of handing them my whole wallet.
Re:Wait people actually store personal (Score:4, Informative)
Everything a plastic card can do? (Score:5, Funny)
It does everything a plastic card does but better.
Can your phone jimmy open door locks?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
With phones becoming thinner and thinner, it will in a few years.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
If only there was a way to selectively unlock part of a phone without unlocking the entire phone....
Re: (Score:3)
Now they have a reason to force you to unlock it, to see the ID.
nice try there
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Unlocking a leather wallet is dramatically easier, then, say, an Apple iPhone which the cops have so far had a lot of trouble doing. Yeah there have been zero days and the like.
But the zero day in leather wallets, known colloquially as "You can open the wallet", first observed in the 1600s is still unpatched 400 years later.
Re: (Score:1)
yeah but unlocking the wallet doesnt give them access to your location history, your conversations with friends and families, your search history, all of your photos.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yep! After all, no steel safe has ever been unlocked! Safe means, impervious to any attempts to open.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
stuff on cell phones they carry around?
My phone is password protected.
My wallet is not.
Guess my risk tolerance level is just a wee bit different.
Carrying your physical ID is a far greater risk than carrying an easily replaceable password-protected photo of that ID.
Re: (Score:2)
But how can you prove that the copy of your ID is a genuine ID?
While you could use cryptography in both your phone and a ID reader connected to some server infrastructure, that would not work without a reader, or if the reader is off-line.
A physical ID works off-line: it is hard to forge and has your photo, so that all that is require to verify it are a pair of human eyes (one eye would suffice, actually).
Re: (Score:2)
Of course, why not. Don't tell me you don't have an encrypted and locked cell phone...
Next you're going to tell me you don't take your drivers license with you when driving because you're afraid you may lose it or be asked to see it by a police officer.
Re: (Score:2)
It is for me to use to make calls and texts, mostly just 2 factor auths and touching base with the wife. I rarely answer any incoming calls since they are mostly spam calls now. Irks the wife but my phone rarely makes it out of my brief case.
BTW I am an Apple Developer(in addition to my
yah (Score:4, Informative)
Argentina has been doing this for a few years now. It's called "DNI Digital"
But in Argentina you need to present your ID card (DNI) for any credit or debit card transaction (this is required by law), so we're used to carrying our ID card everywhere most of the time.
Re: (Score:2)
Argentina has been doing this for a few years now. It's called "DNI Digital"
But in Argentina you need to present your ID card (DNI) for any credit or debit card transaction (this is required by law), so we're used to carrying our ID card everywhere most of the time.
That sounds somewhat inconvenient. I assume you can still fill your car using your card, but you also have to scan your ID or something?
Re:yah (Score:5, Informative)
We neither self serve nor have readers integrated into pumps. An employee fills your tank then swipes your card in a standard credit card terminal. He takes a look at your ID and checks your name against the card, and checks for your photo. In practice this never happens. Many places don't care and will just take your card (especially a Maestro card which has a PIN anyways).
The DNI was supposed to have a chip built into it that would have your bus card and all but i think it never materialized. For machine reading it has a PDF417 barcode at the front, and a MRZ at the back (the LAST>NAME >> FIRST > NAME >>>>>>> thing on passports). It doesn't have a magnetic band.
The DNI, interestingly enough, is not a passport but it can act as one for most countries in south america. If I fly to Colombia, I don't need a passport. I just use my national ID card.
Re: (Score:2)
NFC enabled phones are rare here in Argentina. I don't know why. We have QR payment apps but they've been developed here. The leading one is MercadoPago, which is owned by Mercadolibre and it's listed in NYSE as MELI. There is no apple pay, paypal, google pay or anything else. Only MELI and some Visa-owned app now. Probably central bank regulations prevent apple, paypal, and google from playing here.
I'll be the first (Score:2)
"Germany says its citizens will be able to use smartphones to store their government-issued ID cards and prove their identity online"
Let me be the first to say that I see nothing that could possibly go wrong here, especially since we all know that phones are super-secure.
Re: (Score:2)
Let me be the first to say that I see nothing that could possibly go wrong here, especially since we all know that phones are super-secure.
You're not the first. Americans have been living in the digital ID/payments dark ages for years under a shadow of irrational fear and paranoia. We've had digital ID and payments in Australia for years. Whatever boogeyman you're hiding from hasn't appeared here yet Digital is not fraud proof, but it's a lot less prone to fraud than analog.
Re: (Score:3)
I'll tell you what the real boogeyman is. There's no way any government is going to allow a FOSS app to be used for this. And no way I'm installing a government's closed-source app.
Re: (Score:2)
There's no way any government is going to allow a FOSS app to be used for this
And why not? You just need to hold your government to more account. There was a recent/topical outcry over the UK's NHS Covid track and trace app for the same sort of reasons. The upshot was that its source code was uploaded to GitHub [github.com].
Advocacy for open government works.
Re: (Score:2)
Replying to my own post, here's the blog article discussing the open-sourcing of the app [nhsx.nhs.uk]. Worth a quick read.
Re: (Score:2)
Let me be the first to say that I see nothing that could possibly go wrong here, especially since we all know that phones are super-secure.
You'd be right. Little to nothing goes wrong right now when people lose their IDs either. Though I'm sure you have some weird contrived idea that somehow an ID becomes more critical on account of being on the phone.
Re: (Score:2)
My cell phone is a lot more secure than my wallet, where my ID currently resides.
Here in Iowa anyway, we're already allowed to carry our proof of auto insurance on our phones.
The only problem I see here is a lot of places want to see a "government issued photo id" to identify you personally, and storing it electronically on a device you control would seen to make it easi
Re: (Score:2)
to be loaded onto a phone app that is made by the phone manufacturer.
I don't want any apps on my phone from the manufacturer! This is exactly what's wrong with this idea: it's the beginning of the end of the freedom to be different. Sure, we still have paper ID for now...
Re: (Score:2)
I don't want any apps on my phone from the manufacturer!
uhh.... your phone already has dozens of "apps" on it by the manufacturer, along with running several hundred smaller programs they wrote running the background.
Re: (Score:2)
Why would you assume that? Just because you left your phone the way it came?
Re: (Score:2)
No assumptions necessary. You might be able to remove most of the regular apps the phone comes with (the ones you see on the main home screen) but some functions simply have no downloadable counterpart, such as the Settings apps for most phones.
And it's basically impossible to get rid of most of the "apps" that are on the phone running in the background, unless you prefer to carry around a paperweight that can't do what it was made for. To demonstrate, delete even one of the wrong system files on your com
That is a reality in Brazil for sometime (Score:2)
Last year when we (as a househld couple) renewed the car licensing, we found out that the printed paper for the car document licensing was no longer needed: there is an officially issued app (for android and iphone) that will receive and display the car papers. But, along with that, the same app calls the electronic drivers-license version. And the drivers license is an official ID around here, as any other, besides carrying the official numbers for other required documents.
The app authentication is done t
Re: (Score:2)
And no, I am not saying it is "perfectly safe" and that "nothing could go wrong", or that it does have any special safeguards towards privacy or security. On the contrary. But so far I have seen no one close, nor one in the news, victim of this being mishandled. (it is a matter of time, in my opinion).
Re: That is a reality in Brazil for sometime (Score:2)
smart, but, needs a slight change (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
Distress codes have been tried before. They tend to result in too many false positives to be worthwhile.
Re: (Score:2)
Why? Do you think your current ID card has a magic "notify authorities that someone stole my wallet" function?
Why do people constantly come up with massively contrived situations which have no basis in the current reality? You people watch way to many spy movies.
Dumb dumb dumb (Score:4, Interesting)
Phones are just computers that you lug along with you. Relying upon them for a digital identity is dumb. Governments, if you want to do a good job use smartcards, no they're not sexy but they are more secure and can be accessed via a most smartphones. Digital identities on smartphones is all about surrendering your citizens identities to corporate entities who's sole motive is to provide a return to their shareholders.
I like how they felt the need to explain (Score:2)
Glad they didn't have this in the 30s (Score:1)
Papers, please (Score:1)
Being implemented in Colorado (Score:2)
https://mycolorado.state.co.us... [state.co.us]