techUK Reaction: UK Government Announces Mandatory Digital ID ...
The UK government has today announced plans to roll out a free digital ID scheme, branded BritCard, for all UK citizens and legal residents.
www.techuk.orgHere’s the latest I can share based on recent coverage.
Core update
Key developments and context
Notable notes
Would you like a brief timeline of key events and quotes from the committees, or a digest of the main arguments for and against digital ID in the UK? I can also pull you the most recent official statements or parliamentary papers if you want. Please tell me which you prefer.
Citations
The UK government has today announced plans to roll out a free digital ID scheme, branded BritCard, for all UK citizens and legal residents.
www.techuk.orgThe long-expected consultation into the National Digital ID Scheme was yesterday launched.
www.wired-gov.netA new inquiry has been launched by the The Home Affairs Committee examining the opportunities and challenges posed by government-issued digital identification. With the rise of digital technologies and government plans for a GOV.UK wallet, encasing government documents and a new digital driver’s licence, the inquiry will explore how new forms of digital ID could
identityweek.netThe government has now shifted to a voluntary digital ID scheme which it says will allow people to access services more easily.
www.bbc.co.ukThe home affairs select committee has branded the government’s launch of digital ID plans for all British adults last year “nothing short of a fiasco,” saying ministers mishandled the policy from the start. Dame Karen Bradley said the public had been spooked by badly explained plans, even as the government presses ahead with a voluntary app after ditching its mandatory approach.
www.mogazmasr.comThe House of Commons Home Affairs Committee has announced an inquiry into the issues surrounding the use of government-issued digital ID.
www.computerweekly.comIDs will not have to be carried day-to-day, but will be compulsory for those who want to work.
www.bbc.co.ukIn September, the government announced plans for a new digital ID scheme that would be mandatory for ‘right to work’ checks by 2029. Since the announcement, a petition against the proposal accrued nearly three million signatures, making it the fourth largest petition in British history and the second largest non-Brexit petition. It highlights problems with: mission creep; privacy; security risks; accuracy; discrimination and exclusion; and fundamental changes in the relationship between the stat
www.statewatch.orgA parliamentary scrutiny committee has condemned the mandatory digital ID launch as a fiasco, forcing ministers to pivot to a voluntary model for accessing public services.
zennews24.co.uk