Government Wants To Control Your Digital Identity
As states continue to implement digital ID systems, it is essential that they build tools in ways that inherently protect civil liberties rather than asking citizens to just trust government officials.

In many states, Americans can now ditch their physical wallet and verify their identity simply by tapping their device on a scanner. And just as digital wallets from Apple and Google have made commerce more convenient, digital ID systems could potentially make government interactions faster and more efficient. But they also raise the ominous specter of government surveillance. Can we have the efficiency of a digital ID without letting government track our every move?
Yes, but that's not the path we're on.
Take Colorado. Since 2019, Coloradans have been able to use a digital ID as a legal form of personal identification throughout the state. Users download an application to their smartphone, enroll in the service, and have their identity authenticated by taking photos or videos of a valid ID card or other government issued documents to prove that they are who they claim to be. Then that information is encrypted, and the user is granted a digital ID and an associated key or code that serves as an identifier.
Colorodans can simply show their digital ID to verify their identity in much the same way as you would show your driver's license to a bartender to prove you are over 21. That means of verifying identity is relatively private. However, many services, both public and private, are increasingly turning to electronic verification, which requires pinging a government server. This ping creates a data record outlining who, what, when, and where. Over time, these records create a government-controlled ledger of information about its citizens.
Built and maintained by third-party vendors, Colorado Digital ID collects troves of information from users. As outlined in the privacy policy for myColorado, the app collects data "including, but not limited to your IP address, device ID and browser type," and information on the "general geographic area" of the user. The privacy policy further details that the government shares information with third-party service providers and, much more concerningly, with law enforcement and other government agencies upon request.
The fundamental flaw in digital ID systems like Colorado's is that they are centralized. In order to work, citizens must trust the government to protect their data from malevolent actors and from the state itself, despite the fact that government agencies have not been good stewards of citizen data.
When implementing digital ID systems, many states claim they will respect the privacy and civil liberties of their citizens, essentially promising that they will not use their newfound power for evil. But far better than Google's longtime motto "Don't be evil," is the idea of "Can't be evil." It's easier to trust state actors to respect our privacy when they lack the ability to violate our privacy.
And yet, digital IDs do show promise. These systems could streamline and modernize archaic procedures by introducing secure, easily verifiable credentials that work seamlessly across our physical and digital lives. Digital IDs can help make governments more accessible and efficient, reducing costs and increasing civic participation by automating many processes that would otherwise require physical interactions. For example, digital ID systems can allow citizens to securely apply for permits online, eliminating the time and hassle of doing so in person.
How do we get the good and not the bad? For inspiration, we should look to the cypherpunks of the late 1980s and early 1990s who had a clear vision centered around robust privacy secured by encryption. "We cannot expect governments, corporations, or other large, faceless organizations to grant us privacy out of their beneficence," wrote Eric Hughes in A Cypherpunk Manifesto. "The technologies of the past did not allow for strong privacy, but electronic technologies do."
Decentralized networks now make it such that there need not be a trusted intermediary in a digital system, so digital IDs could theoretically cut the government out entirely. Similarly, advanced cryptographic methods such as zero-knowledge proofs allow information to be verified without the verifier needing access to the information. Combining these two characteristics, we can create systems that grant us all the benefits of digital IDs and are resistant to surveillance. In fact, several projects already have protocols and products that operate based on these principles.
Hughes is right that governments, by their very nature, resist privacy and are more than willing to exploit new technologies to surveil citizens. Thus, as more states and localities choose to implement digital ID systems, it is up to the citizens to demand that those systems be built in ways that protect their civil liberties. The technology exists. All that is left is for it to be implemented.
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I've got a digit for government. Two of them as a matter of fact.
Ditto, one on each hand.
Indeed.
The government isn’t going to get the most mileage out of our imminent social scores without a robust digital ID.
Quit resisting.
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How do they plan to do it internationally? Government is not very competent. Whoever doubts that, needs only to take a ride down I-95, no matter which section. Government can't even fix the potholes, much less create a viable digital ID. Does anyone remember the (in)glorious launch of Obamacare? They also tried with IPv6 and that has failed. I am more afraid of Google than of the government. Google people know their stuff. However, the problem will arise if Google or Amazon get in cahoots with the government and start doing it their way. I am much more worried about the private companies with the global reach than of the government itself. BTW, anonymity is generally bad and enables people to be protected from the moral consequences of their words. That gives us spam, bullying, racism, cyber-stalking and phishing. Anonymity is not the same as privacy.
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Gargoogle is already in cahoots with the government.
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Damn fine idea.
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In all fairness, it's an $800 logo on a $200 hunk of electronics
Luke, your headline is too long. Try this:
'Government Wants To Control You'
Government Wants Control.
Of course it does. Every government does. The trick is to prevent it from doing so. We haven't yet found a way of doing so. There are few constitutional amendments that we would have to create in order to control the government from becoming a monster.
We don't need more Constitutional amendments, we need the Congress to stick to the clearly defined tasks given it in Art. 1, a proper respect for the Commerce Clause (as written and understood), and a respect for the 9th and 10th Amendments. If the Roberts Court continues down the "Major Questions" pathway, we should be well on our way back towards sanity.
However......
The most difficult task is convincing the stupefied public that total government control is not beneficial to anyone but the government.
There are far too many Americans who either ignore the warnings, mock those who are warning them or in some cases actually want just such a government.
How anybody could even consider a totalitarian government would be fine is beyond ignorant.
But how does this advance the sexualization of children?
Will secure digital IDs ensure ass-sex with Mexican children while on weed?
That's tomorrow's Roundup.
Shrike’s dreams come true!
Decentralized networks now make it such that there need not be a trusted intermediary in a digital system, so digital IDs could theoretically cut the government out entirely.
Too bad block chain advocates do not give a shit about creating an actual use case for their products. Turns out - 'intermediaries' are necessary.
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
1) Pay cash or walk out. 2) Carry a paper passport, just as in any other dictatorial hellhole. Use it a your only form of ID. 3) If you must have an email, make a bogus name, etc. and get a free one from some small ISP, then wash that through a few additional layers of free email accounts. 4) Trust no one. 5) Drown your smartphone in the deepest lake, river or ocean you can find.
Over time, these records create a government-controlled
ledgerdecentralized blockchain of information about its citizens.FIFY
Sorry, above not meant in reply.
6) get rid of the democrats and their collaborators.
My Smartphone fell in the lake along with my guns, gold and ammo.
The Government wants to control a great many things it does not understand and is incompetent to affect in any useful way. This has been true of governments since human history began. People who think it is a good idea for governments to try to control aspects of society (usually because they believe they will be the ones controlling the government) need to be invited to go molest a badger.
>>governments, by their very nature, resist privacy and are more than willing to exploit new technologies to surveil citizens.
the lesson of like half the Twilight Zones.
I used to walk around saying "China is not your friend", but I'm switching to"Government is not your friend", it's more inclusive (and I hear that's a nice thing!).
It's absolutely maddening when so many Americans bow and scrape to the government.
It's almost as if they want the government o be in total control.
Colorodans can simply show their digital ID to verify their identity in much the same way as you would show your driver's license to a bartender to prove you are over 21.
Explain to me, in excruciating detail, how this isn't racist.
As a Hoosier, the tracking of Colorodans, presumably requiring someone to go Godzilla on your ass to treat it, sounds more like a homophobic/monkeypox thing.
Call Rev.Al and Ben Crump.
Built and maintained by third-party vendors, Colorado Digital ID collects troves of information from users. As outlined in the privacy policy for myColorado, the app collects data "including, but not limited to your IP address, device ID and browser type," and information on the "general geographic area" of the user. The privacy policy further details that the government shares information with third-party service providers and, much more concerningly, with law enforcement and other government agencies upon request.
That's 'cause Jared Polis just wants to leave you alone.
Yeah, I caught that one, too. I understand Reason needs a "libertarian Democrat" to be able to maintain BOF SIDES!!. But, Polis keeps showing himself as a statist and making them look silly.
There's really not enough information in the article to tell me that the alternative is really entirely secure from government snooping. That said, the obvious question is how is an electronic ID system is preferable to a little piece of plastic or laminated cardboard for anything other than centralized tracking? It's not like pulling out my driver's license is some sort of massive undertaking relative to pulling up the app on my phone and (presumably) memorizing or retrieving a password (as mentioned in the article).
I guess the phone has already replaced everything else in many people's wallets, so why not that too. I don't want any part of it, but I'm sure it seems obvious to younger, more tech oriented people.
The concept, for me, is that I can leave home wearing my watch. I can use it to lock and unlock my door. I can use it as a car key. I can use it as a method of payment. I can send and receive texts, emails, and calls. I can use it to get directions. I can use it as a boarding pass or a ticket to a football game. I can use it as ID or a DL. I can use it to log in to sites without having to remember a bunch of strong passwords.
The reality isn’t as spiffy as the concept, it rarely is, but that’s the concept.
So, you've traded convenience for freedom.
That watch (or its close kin the smartphone) WILL eventually kick you in the ass.
That's fine as long as it's completely voluntary. Voluntsry does not mean you can't enter a place or do something without a phone.
Why oh why? Tough questions. Hope they came to some answers!
Just bad luck, I'm sure.
Why is Washington the epicenter of the fentanyl crisis?
It isn't.
the state had the biggest increase in the nation — more than 21% — in fatal overdoses reported between February 2022 and February 2023.
An example of what I have called the WSJ law of statistics - that in general any political argument using statistics will omit the statistics needed to make the point. Washington may have the highest increase, but that doesn't mean it has the highest rate - and whichever that state is is a more appropriate centre (sic). So Sen Cantwell - and hence you - omit the necessary stats.
Herewith for opioids in general (according to the NIH primarily fentanyl)
https://www.kff.org/other/state-indicator/opioid-overdose-death-rates/?currentTimeframe=0&sortModel=%7B%22colId%22:%22Location%22,%22sort%22:%22asc%22%7D
And lo! Washington is below the national average.
I've never known Senator Cantwell to be truthful, so no surprise.
Why does Washington have two of the worst members of the US senate? And one of America’s worst state governors?
"could theoretically cut the government out entirely."
Which neatly explains why that will never happen. No doubt there will be transaction taxes coming to a digital ID near you in order to pay for
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This Fascist Administration and their party want to control every aspect of your life. Your finances. Your speech. What mode of transportation you can use. What type of stove your can cook on. There is more, and more coming. What is sad if people support this and vote for this thinking they will be better off. We don't teach history in schools anymore, we propagandize young students. They don't know Moslems throw gays off of high building. They don't know the Bolsheviks killed millions in the name of equity. But they will learn the hard way someday. I am old, and only hope I live long enough to see them attain what they want, and how much they hate it.
Really Reason? Recently there was a little nothing burger called ‘The Twitter Files’?
Private Company, whatevvveh
Democrats want to establish a left wing dictatorship.
Left Wing Academics Send Open Letter to Joe Biden Urging Him to Ignore Supreme Court Rulings the Left Doesn’t Like
Two left wing professors, one of law and another of political science, have written an open letter to Joe Biden urging him to ignore Supreme Court rulings that the left doesn’t like.
Imagine the reaction of these same professors if Trump defied the Supreme Court. That would be an assault on democracy, but it’s totally different when they do it, you see.
Is this how our cherished norms get restored? By defying the highest court in the land?
What is most striking about these professors is how they continue to claim they are defenders of democracy, yet seek to use unilateral executive authority to defy the courts and, in cases like the tuition forgiveness and affirmative action, the majority of the public.
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/07/left-wing-academics-send-open-letter-joe-biden/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=left-wing-academics-send-open-letter-joe-biden
Many nations are constitutional republics. Iran, Russia, and North Korea are some. But they have dictators, so their Constitution is of no consequence. I have been saying all along the Democrats are trying to establish a dictatorship. This is absolute proof.
Joe McCarthy was right.
He was an American hero. Much maligned by the very Marxists he was trying to destroy, and their collaborators. The American people abandoned his cause. Now we pay the price.
I used to work with a devout Christian who was convinced that the computer was the mark of the beast. My late uncle, an atheist was convinced that the computer was something similar.
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A lot of Americans won't care about this. As long as they can buy their sixpack, a frozen pizza and watch celebrity news, CNN and Rachael Maddow, that's all they care about. The problem is, they think it won't affect them. I'm sure a lot of Russians held the same thoughts. That is until they were sent to the gulags.
Never trust anything the government does or says as being beneficial or truthful.
Anyone who says,"it can't happen here" is already ignoring what has already happened.
The Revolutionary War was fought by roughly 3% of the population. The next one won’t be much different.
"essentially promising that they will not use their newfound power for evil. But far better than Google's longtime motto "Don't be evil,"
But then "don't be evil" is an anagram for "bend to evil"—which is what the governments will do when given the chance.
completely insane to get involved with this digital lunacy...
you people are the libertarian LEFT.......
Only a fool trusts the government.
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