Keir Starmer’s announcement that the UK will introduce mandatory digital IDs for all citizens has triggered questions about their use, effectiveness and threat to privacy. Amid fierce debate about the plans, the government has promised to take the “best aspects of the digital identification systems that are already up and running around the world”.
Which countries have digital IDs? The EU is aiming to roll out Digital Identity (eID) Wallets for all citizens of the bloc by the end of 2026, but many European countries already use national electronic ID systems. Beyond the continent, countries including Australia, India, Canada, Japan, Nigeria, China and South Korea all offer ways for their citizens to verify their identity and access services digitally.
How are they used? The e-Estonia platform, “by far the most highly developed national ID-card system in the world”, contains legal photo ID and provides access to all of Estonia’s government services, said Sky News. In Denmark, “life online is almost impossible without MitID”, said The Guardian. Introduced in 2023, the app is needed to pay taxes, book a health appointment or apply for college.
Poland’s mObywatel allows people to check points on their driving licence, look up local air quality or change their polling station, among other things. Ukraine’s DIIA app is used by the majority of citizens to access more than 70 online services, as well as to track drone attacks.
What are the concerns? Cyberattackers have targeted e-Estonia on multiple occasions over the past two decades. In 2021, a hacker obtained around 300,000 document photos “through a security vulnerability in the state portal”, the country’s government said.
Other objections centre on fears that data could be “amalgamated, searched and analysed to monitor, track and profile people”, said The Guardian’s technology editor Robert Booth. In India, mass collection of data from 1.3 billion citizens for the Aadhaar ID platform has “horrified” civil libertarians, said The New York Times. Enrolment is now “mandatory for hundreds of public services and many private ones, from taking school exams to opening bank accounts”. “You almost feel like life is going to stop without an Aadhaar,” one woman told the newspaper. |