- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
I’ve never understood the appeal of digital driver’s licenses. If I get pulled over, there’s no fucking way I’m unlocking my phone and handing it to a cop.
It would be useful everywhere else, apart from when pulled over by a cop. Like at a bar, grocery / liquor store while buying drinks, airport security if TSA allows it and any store which needs your ID for pickup. No need to pull my ID out if I’m just going to pay with my phone.
All fair points. I don’t fly much and it’s been such a long time since I’ve been carded that I don’t really think about using it for stuff like that.
As I recall, you don’t need to unlock your phone to share your ID.
- You tap an NFC reader with your locked phone
- The reader asks you to share certain information (for example, a bar might just ask for birthday and photo)
- you approve the encrypted data share via biometrics
- the share completes and returns to your Lock Screen
When has a cop ever approached your car with an NFC reader?
I haven’t been pulled over in years.
And the digital IDs are in the second phase of a pilot program in CA. People are still required to drive with physical IDs because the readers are not widespread.
It’s a new thing. The goal is to have readers in all sorts of places. Right not they’re basically only at airports.
Must be nice. I can’t remember the last time I drove across Louisiana and didn’t get pulled over in some podunk town whose only source of income is speeding tickets. We’ve had digital IDs here for years, and I can’t help but think that getting people to handover an unlocked phone is exactly the point.
Yeah, I can’t speak for Louisiana, but in CA the goal appears to be to avoid handing over unlocked phones, since that completely negates the privacy / security pitch behind digital IDs.
For me it’d be more of a backup plan in case I forgot my wallet
No thanks.
I have too much in their ecosystem as it is. Mail. Drive. I think I’ll be skipping Wallet.