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EU Exploring Idea of Using Government ID Cards As Mandatory Online Logins (softpedia.com) 367

An anonymous reader writes from a report via Softpedia: Fears that fake online reviews might ruin the consumer market and damage legitimate businesses are making the European Commission consider the idea of forcing all EU citizens to log into online accounts using their government-issued ID cards. Details about these plans can be found in a proposal named "Online Platforms and the Digital Single Market Opportunities and Challenges," announced on May 25, 2016. According to this document, "online platforms should accept credentials issued or recognized by national public authorities, such as electronic or mobile IDs, national identity cards, or bank cards." The reasoning, according to the EU, is that "online ratings and reviews of goods and services are helpful and empowering to consumers, but they need to be trustworthy and free from any bias or manipulation. A prominent example is fake reviews."
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EU Exploring Idea of Using Government ID Cards As Mandatory Online Logins

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  • Death to anonyminity (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @09:41PM (#52278795)

    While I think that, since we're all carrying chip & pin cards, that they should be useable as login credentials, they should not, in any way, be mandatory.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @10:18PM (#52278983)

      While I think that, since we're all carrying chip & pin cards, that they should be useable as login credentials,

      I don't see how that solves anything. My daughter makes money writing fake reviews, and she uses her real name. At most, an identity check will prevent someone from posting more than one review about the same product, but with millions of products and millions of reviewers, that is not much of a limitation.

      • by johannesg ( 664142 ) on Thursday June 09, 2016 @02:53AM (#52279729)

        Of course it solves everything, since the purpose is the destruction of unwanted opinion. Anything they don't like (such as cricicism of the EU, immigration, islam, etc.) and wham - it's hate speech, and you are gone. Disappeared from the internet, which in this day and age of electronic communication is about as good as being disappeared to Siberia.

        Did you think Juncker was joking when he said he would do _everything_ before 'allowing' a right-wing party to govern in any European nation?

        Internet has been the uncontrolled factor, the thorn in the globalists hide, the one thing they couldn't get their fingers on. It allowed people to discuss and organize themselves, away from their control zones. And here we have the first attempt at putting an end to all that. If we allow this, we will be their slaves for all eternity.

        We desperately need a bill of rights in Europe, and it needs to contain things like the right to privacy and the right to anonimity.

      • by gsslay ( 807818 )

        Are you still on here telling us about your failure to teach your daughter any morals?

    • by Taco Cowboy ( 5327 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @11:05PM (#52279165) Journal

      ... While I think that, since we're all carrying chip & pin cards, that they should be useable as login credentials, they should not, in any way, be mandatory ...

      Why don't we go all the way back, and make people wearing the Star of David for easy identification?

      Europe criticizes China when the Communist Regime mandated that everyone who register for their weibo services must use their real name

      The European parliament mourned for the loss of free speech in China, and poured money to support 'Chinese dissidents', even to the tune of awarding the noble prize to a certain Chinese writer (I read his books, in the Mandarin language, they were pure trash) just because he happens to be a 'Chinese dissident'

      And no, I am not a supporter of the Communist Regime of China. I was an opponent of the CCP, and still am

      The thing is, if Europe criticized China for the death of freedom they (Europeans) better don't repeat what the CCP has done

      sigh!

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Pentium100 ( 1240090 )

        You don't get it - the reason EU criticizes China or Russia for lack of freedom is not actually because it wants the people to have freedom. The problem with China for the EU is that it's not EU that is tracking the people of China.

        Thy said that in the USSR you were tracked by KGB - I'm sure the KGB did not even dream of the tracking capabilities of modern "democratic freedom-loving" governments of today.

        One day the EU will be renamed to Democratic Union of Free Democratic European Republics for Freedom and

      • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 09, 2016 @03:25AM (#52279805)

        As usual this is the tech media completely failing at politics, as it does with just about every proposed bill related to technology ever.

        I don't really have any idea how the word "mandatory" made it into the headline of the Slashdot, or original article because it's completely fabricated.

        All that's being talked about is an optional government backed verified user scheme so that someone submitting a review can choose whether they want to add their official verification to it or not. It'd be up to sites then to determine how they weight verified reviews, some may choose to only allow submitting verified reviews, others might treat verified reviews no different to anonymous reviews other than to shove a little visual verified flag on the review, and others again may list verified reviews top, or only include verified ratings in overall averages whilst leaving anonymous reviews visible or some combination thereof.

        This is why Slashdot has become so irrelevant in the world today, it spends so much of it's time arguing about bad political ideas that aren't even being proposed. There are certainly bad sides to things like the right to be forgotten, RIPA, and so on, and yet Slashdot regularly argues against and refers to provisions that simply just don't even exist within them which begs the question, what's the point? If we argued against actual bad parts of legislation then there may be some value, but arguing aganist things that aren't real as is the case here, making absurd comparisons between the EU and China based on nothing other than the fact you've grossly misunderstood the proposal because all you did was read the incorrect headline is just a completely nonsensical waste of time.

        Slashdot might as well give up on politics related posts, because everytime something political is published here it's rife with misunderstanding, and people start expressing their outrage at things that aren't even proposed or law.

        People on Slashdot have long railed against propaganda, and misleading headlines, and yet here they are falling for exactly that every single time a political story is posted to Slashdot that's factually incorrect. You think you're all independent thinkers, you think you're smart, but you repeatedly all fall for this propaganda, you see a headline and jump on it arguing against it and so arguing against the institution behind it, and that's exactly what the europhobes that created the original false headline about it being mandatory wanted you to do. You're suckers to the propaganda, you're unthinking sheep to the machine. You fell for this misleading headline hook, line, and sinker, and did what they wanted you to do - you extended it to argue against the EU as a whole based on a completely fabricated falsehood.

        Question more and parrot less, and perhaps you'll be able to raise the level of intellectual debate on this site to where it used to be. No one gives a shit about arguments against things that aren't even true because they're entirely meaningless.

      • by johanw ( 1001493 )

        The European parliament and the commission are two very different things. The parliament is chosen directly by the people, the commission is appointed by the governments, which in turn are in most EU countries indirectly chosen by the parliaments. In practice, the commission tends to be anti-democratic and operating without much oversight.

      • ... While I think that, since we're all carrying chip & pin cards, that they should be useable as login credentials, they should not, in any way, be mandatory ...

        Why don't we go all the way back, and make people wearing the Star of David for easy identification?

        Europe criticizes China when the Communist Regime mandated that everyone who register for their weibo services must use their real name

        The European parliament mourned for the loss of free speech in China, and poured money to support 'Chinese dissidents', even to the tune of awarding the noble prize to a certain Chinese writer (I read his books, in the Mandarin language, they were pure trash) just because he happens to be a 'Chinese dissident'

        And no, I am not a supporter of the Communist Regime of China. I was an opponent of the CCP, and still am

        The thing is, if Europe criticized China for the death of freedom they (Europeans) better don't repeat what the CCP has done

        sigh!

        Before any more people have an epileptic fit over this let's keep in mind that somewhere between the original article and the Slashdot summary the line:

        "European Commission is exploring the theoretical possibilities of forcing online review platforms and EU citizens into using government IDs as online identities."

        followed by:

        "In its present form, the document has little chance of passing through the European Parliament, being clearly written by a person who didn't take all factors into account.

        b

        • I do read the comments here and have realize a dichotomy of responses to the same article

          Those from the West side of the Pond (USA) tend to see this as a creeping danger, a slippery slope that will end up gobbling up the rights of the individuals

          Those from the Right side of the Pond (Europe), on the other hand, tend to espouse your point of view --- that the entire thing is nothing but an 'encouragement', a mere 'suggestion', with 'check and balances', and so on, and so forth

          A guy even lament that we from t

    • by EzInKy ( 115248 )

      I still find it amazing how many here on Slashdot want to do away with anonymity.

  • For the reviews... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by m0hawk ( 3030287 )

    First they came for the reviews, and I did not speak out,
    Then they came for the online blogs, and I did not speak out,
    Then they came for the shoppers, and I did not speak out,
    Then they came for slashdotters, and I did not speak out,
    And there was nobody left to speak for me.

    • by Cytotoxic ( 245301 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @11:25PM (#52279225)

      This is basically my take. Remember all those folks who kept denigrating any argument against privacy intrusions as a "slippery slope fallacy?" Well, welcome to the bottom of the slippery slope. We've seen some similar rumblings in the US from time to time. Oddly, in the political arena there seems to be a large coalition that believes that all speech should be verifiable as to authorship - an area where anonymous speech has a long and important tradition. Actually, political speech is really the main reason that free speech has to be included in national founding documents.

      Even more oddly, the same folks who beat the drums for this ID requirement seem to find the notion of proving your identity in order to vote an abomination.

      I really can't figure out what people are thinking these days on this topic. All I know is that even a whiff of this sort of thing prior to the 1990's would have gotten you drummed off the stage. The image of "show me your papers" or a national ID card was the symbol of everything that was wrong about Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. I guess we've forgotten what that was like.

      Slashdot proves that an online community can form with ID's completely independent of real world identity and still provide all of the credibility checks that real-world communities provide. I'm not sure why anyone would entertain these ideas.

      • This is basically my take. Remember all those folks who kept denigrating any argument against privacy intrusions as a "slippery slope fallacy?" Well, welcome to the bottom of the slippery slope.

        Relax dude, it's a clickbait headline designed precised to invoke irrational emotional responses like you just gave.
        I actually read the article, the proposal isn't a proposal at all, it is merely commentary on possible choices available if you wanted to more reliable online identities. Using Government issued ID is an available option, but nowhere did it recommend that.

      • by Agripa ( 139780 )

        "First thing you need is a Social Security and driver's license."
        "Drivers license? For what, mass driver? Disk drive?"

        And private ownership of unregistered modems had been legal back then.

        Obscure?

  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @09:52PM (#52278851)

    Because nothing helps the spread of knowledge and information like Big Brother watching every single thing that we do :|

    I limit what I see and do on the internet based on the assumption that the Government is watching everything that we do already.
    ( And I'm so damned boring I don't even break any laws :| )

    Once / if it becomes mandatory to log in with a Government approved ID card, I'll just cease using the internet at all.

    My generation ( X ) is the last one who can remember a life without it. Considering the current state of the web as an advertising,
    surveillance and malware distribution platform, I can't say I would miss it much.

  • that would be fine with me, every website i visit i put in my real name and driver's licence number for a password, and it is the same at every website i visit because they confirm it at a government database, i get tired of remembering passwords for every website i visit, plus sometimes i have to wipe my /home/user_name/* stuff because of old corrupted files or i upgrade or switch software or Linux distros, that way if i ever need to enter that info because my browser config got wiped i just pull out my dr
    • so that jacks online cheese shop and have my SS? just so I can login in?

      What about jay's adult toy shop why should they have my real name?

    • ...i just pull out my drivers license and enter my licence number...

      You mean you haven't memorized it yet? I memorized mine over forty years ago and still remember it. I wish I could say the same for my cell phone number, but then, the only time I need to know it is when I give it out to somebody and pretty much everybody who might need it already has it.
  • by stephenmac7 ( 2700151 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @09:53PM (#52278867)

    ...to make sure reviews are accurate. They aren't (nor should they be) the ones running the websites which record and display these reviews. Those websites are the ones who are responsible for making sure the reviews are real. The ones who do the best job are most likely to gain the most users.

    It's called the free market. Let it happen, EU.

    Of course I'm completely aware that review quality is not the reason behind this proposition, but it makes no sense that they would think that such a justification would make sense.

  • by BradMajors ( 995624 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @09:55PM (#52278881)

    If this is such a great benefit for the consumer, then surely everyone will want to use one and making them "mandatory" is unnecessary.

    • Re:mandatory? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Sesostris III ( 730910 ) on Thursday June 09, 2016 @01:45AM (#52279563)
      There was nothing in the EU Commission communication about making it mandatory (for the consumer). That was the spin put on by the Softpedia article. The Commission proposal was about consumer choice as to the credentials they use, including National ID Cards.

      The only part can could be construed as 'mandatory' was the proposal to 'encourage' online platforms to accept these other forms of eID as valid.
      • There was nothing in the EU Commission communication about making it mandatory (for the consumer). That was the spin put on by the Softpedia article. The Commission proposal was about consumer choice as to the credentials they use, including National ID Cards.

        The only part can could be construed as 'mandatory' was the proposal to 'encourage' online platforms to accept these other forms of eID as valid.

        Let me repeat something here: "We decide on something, leave it lying around, and wait and see what happens. If no one kicks up a fuss, because most people don't understand what has been decided, we continue step by step until there is no turning back." (Juncker)

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Yep, TFA is complete bullshit. They even quote the real proposal before claiming it says something completely different. Since no-one RTFA I'll reproduce it here:

        It is recognised that a multitude of username and password combinations is both inconvenient and a security risk. [...], in order to keep identification simple and secure, consumers should be able to choose the credentials by which they want to identify or authenticate themselves. In particular, online platforms should accept credentials issued or recognised by national public authorities, such as electronic or mobile IDs, national identity cards, or bank cards.

        In other words, they want web sites to allow citizens to use their government IDs to log in, as well as other methods. That's dumb for its own reasons, but it's not an attempt to force people to identify themselves, it's a misguided attempt to make life easier for consumers. This is the sort of thing the EU loves, like standardizing on USB for char

  • by ooloorie ( 4394035 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @10:06PM (#52278925)

    If Amazon or eBay or Google wanted to adopt true name policies for online reviews, they could already do that (in fact, a few of them have "verified identities" and identify reviews with them). No national ID is needed, they just get it from the credit card info and verifying purchases. Obviously, they have decided that allowing pseudonymous reviews is better.

    And unless you are a total idiot (like, apparently, Eurocrats are), you ought to be able to distinguish fake from true reviews fairly easily.

    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Thursday June 09, 2016 @12:05AM (#52279357)

      why do governments have to get involved?

      So if someone online is making a politician's life miserable by pointing out his lies and broken promises, they can track him down and toss him in jail on trumped up charges as a way to shut him up.

      I'll invoke the dogfooding rule here. If the government thinks this is such a great idea, why don't they go first. Require every staffer, speech writer, letter responder, etc. to attach their real name to everything they write. Someone decides your tax return is wrong? He has to attach is real name to the report. Every trial balloon that's floated? Has to have the political manager's name attached. All politicians' votes must be recorded too - no more voice votes. Try that for 5-10 years and if they don't mind, only then should you try it with the general public.

      • So if someone online is making a politician's life miserable by pointing out his lies and broken promises, they can track him down and toss him in jail on trumped up charges as a way to shut him up.

        Well, yes, that is likely the real underlying motivation for the EU to want to destroy online anonymity: European elites hate it when the people think and speak for themselves.

        I was just responding to the ostensible justification, namely that "fake online reviews" somehow "hurt businesses", and I was pointing ou

  • by Guy Harris ( 3803 ) <guy@alum.mit.edu> on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @10:10PM (#52278945)

    The Fine Document [europa.eu] says:

    However, large parts of the public remain apprehensive about data collection and consider that more transparency is needed. Online platforms must respond to these concerns by more effectively informing users what personal data is collected and how it is shared and used, in line with the EU data protection framework.[36] More generally, this issue includes the ways in which users identify themselves in order to access online platforms and services. It is recognised that a multitude of username and password combinations is both inconvenient and a security risk. However, the frequent practice of using one’s platform profile to access a range of websites and services often involves non-transparent exchanges and cross-linkages of personal data between various online platforms and websites. As a remedy, in order to keep identification simple and secure, consumers should be able to choose the credentials by which they want to identify or authenticate themselves. In particular, online platforms should accept credentials issued or recognised by national public authorities, such as electronic or mobile IDs, national identity cards, or bank cards.

    which sounds like it would, at most, require "online platforms" to allow the use of national ID cards as credentials, but says nothing about requiring users to use them as credentials.

    • it would, at most, require "online platforms" to allow the use of national ID cards as credentials, but says nothing about requiring users to use them as credentials.

      Hey, quiet you!

      The -pitchfork vendors- free speech non-bias enforcers will be checking up on you based on your login credentials, so watch it!

    • I don't think you're reading that right. To me, that first part reads like throwaway text that has nothing to do with what follows, even though they're trying to pretend it does. Like this:

      "European citizens are still very wary about government intrusion - so we recommend citizens are allowed to choose through which bodily orifice any mandatory probes are inserted through."

      • I don't think you're reading that right. To me, that first part reads like throwaway text that has nothing to do with what follows, even though they're trying to pretend it does. Like this:

        So by "I don't think you're reading that right" you mean "you're not reading into it what I'm reading into it".

    • by Joen_w ( 909158 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @11:25PM (#52279223)

      which sounds like it would, at most, require "online platforms" to allow the use of national ID cards as credentials, but says nothing about requiring users to use them as credentials.

      Not even that. Page 11 of the document says what the European Commission is planning to do:

      "In order to empower consumers and to safeguard principles of competition, consumer protection and data protection, the Commission will further promote interoperability actions, including through issuing principles and guidance on eID interoperability at the latest by 2017. The aim will be to encourage online platforms to recognise other eID means — in particular those notified under the eIDAS Regulation 39 — that offer the same reassurance as their own."

      So, no requirements, only encouragements. And even if it would propose any requirements, every law the Commission proposes still has to make it through the European Parliament.

      • And even then (assuming that it has passed through parliament) it also would have to be put into the law by each member state. There are still some EU stated laws that as of yet (and probably never will) have not made it into the laws of my country.
    • This is a mostly US plateform everybody will jump on the gun and accuse EU of authoritarianism, dictature, compare to china and north korea. This is the standard fare here, look at past article.
  • Their instinct is always that if something exists, the government bureaucracy needs to get its tentacles into it. The idea that a free marketplace of ideas can exist is just foreign to these guys. I honestly don't think even dyed-in-the-wool socialists like Sanders or Jill Stein would think to make everyone unambiguously identify themselves online with a government id.
    • by Entrope ( 68843 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @10:27PM (#52279019) Homepage

      Don't worry -- as evidenced in comments earlier about Ted Cruz's DNS stewardship bill, European elites would *never* do something like limit Europeans' online rights over something like criticizing religious zealots (Germany), or use their security apparatus to snoop virtually all Internet activity (UK), or outlaw the use of encryption (France), or require a three-strikes policy where someone can allege you pirated things three times to ban you from the Internet (France again). Only the American government does things like that. European governments are enlightened!</sarc>

    • I think you're misunderstanding the role of the EU. To put it in a US perspective, one of its roles is to act as a regulator to ensure free trade within the EU (between the various EU member states) and between the EU and non-EU states. The US equivalent would be the US Federal Trade Commission and the various laws covering interstate commerce. I am not a US citizen, but I believe these still exist!
  • ... are different.

    This is not wild honey.

    This is a blantant ploy to legalize profits for big business.

  • Is there an existing mandatory EU ID card ? or would this be a new initiative in itself ? I also don't see how knowing who wrote the review would ensure a lack or bias or manipulation.

  • When I see some of the possible outcomes of an election in the US, I have a strong interest in the government not being able to track everything I say or do online.

    The present government isn't dangerous, but the collected information will endure and some day (soon?) we may have a government that will act against me for statements that were completely legal when they were made.

  • If this idea goes forward and is widely embraced, then perhaps there will be two "Dark Webs" - the current one, (used mostly by criminals), and "Dark Web Lite". The latter will be used mostly by the new class of criminals created by the new legislation; namely, those who say "fuck that" to the whole misguided 'papers please!' version of the Internet and establish their own online territory where anonymity is honoured, and where government ID's aren't required and don't mean shit.

  • Seriously, here in the US, I am amazed that the USPO, which does our passports, has not picked up a sideline of doing state IDs (IDs, not driver licenses), along with the ability to have a verified ID key. It makes sense for them to be able to create these (actually sell them), since they are already used to checking IDs, etc. Would I want to be verified everywhere? Not a chance. OTOH, when dealing with the IRS, stores, etc. I very much would love to have them require a vetted ID, esp. when dealing with CCs
  • Muh profits (Score:4, Insightful)

    by PPH ( 736903 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @11:33PM (#52279249)

    Terrorism, drugs, pornography and other criminal activities were not enough to justify this. But threaten the bottom line of big business and suddenly Something Must Be Done.

  • by gavron ( 1300111 ) on Wednesday June 08, 2016 @11:36PM (#52279267)

    If you want to use your credit card to verify you know a name that matches a number and maybe two other numbers and a checksum, good for you. Any credit card processor will verify it for you *AND* if you're not a customer of one you can just go try and buy ANYTHING online and if the credit card checks out you can go and use it.

    Government IDs are different and the systems that can verify them run everything from C# to Ada to Cobol. https://fcw.com/articles/2013/... [fcw.com]
    There are -no- APIs to allow anyone to verify them, but moreover there won't be any APIs because OUR government doesn't want FOREIGN governments to be able to verify passports, SSNs, IDs, etc.

    That same "concern" is shared by most every other country in the world. So right there you can kiss API verification goodbye.

    Where does that leave us? Public-key? No... because that's not either
    a) Government provided (read "verified and if they don't like you you can't have one")
    b) Government authenticated (read "if you piss them off it won't verify" think Assange, Snowden, Aaron Schwartz, or ANYONE accused of a crime)

    So given that governments won't provide an API, and we the free people don't want our ability to interact on the Internet taken away by
    a) conscious act of government not wanting to auth you ... or
    b) government can't run a server well and it's not able to auth you ... or
    c) the contractor doing upgrades takes it down 6 hours each Sunday morning like some F** database servers...
    this is a nonstarter.

    E

  • Many sites require a phone number before allowing someone to post reviews. A code wrapped into a SMS is sent to that number, and the user validates the account by inputing the code on the site. How come this is not enough? Some people have two or three phones, but compared to the many mail accounts that may easily be created and used..
    Using the ID card is the end of privacy. Sooner or later more sites and applications would require the ID, and people getting used to give it on the Internet would not hesit
  • If I buy something, I can post a review that is favourable, critical or I can post nothing. I can do this under my own name, someone else's name or an "internet" name.

    Even if I am forced to use one, single, verified, form of identification (no matter whether this is as an EU citizen or not), there is STILL nothing that guarantees what I write in my review is truthful, accurate, competent, unbiased or consistent.

    We would still get situations where suppliers offer "samples" to reviewers in return for them

  • by kevloral ( 786401 ) on Thursday June 09, 2016 @04:16AM (#52279937)
    The article is lying about the proposal when it says that the European Commission is considering forcing all EU citizens to log into online accounts using their government-issued ID cards. That is not true. What the proposal really says (page 10) is:

    However, the frequent practice of using oneâ(TM)s platform profile to access a range of websites and services often involves non-transparent exchanges and cross-linkages of personal data between various online platforms and websites. As a remedy, in order to keep identification simple and secure, consumers should be able to choose the credentials by which they want to identify or authenticate themselves. In particular, online platforms should accept credentials issued or recognised by national public authorities, such as electronic or mobile IDs, national identity cards, or bank cards. In other words: it wants to let consumers choose which authentication method they use, and they suggest online platforms should accept credencials issued by national authorities.

    And why do they want the consumers to be able to use those credentials? Because (page 10):

    It is recognised that a multitude of username and password combinations is both inconvenient and a security risk.

    I wonder why the EU hating camp usually resorts to such dishonest bashing tactics (as if they weren't actual reasons to criticize the EU without having to spread lies).
  • by Megol ( 3135005 ) on Thursday June 09, 2016 @04:40AM (#52279983)

    Even if we all ignore that this is a suggestion, not something that would pass through the strong EU privacy rules etc.:

    IN NO WAY DOES THE CURRENT TEXT INDICATE ONE WOULD BE FORCED TO IDENTIFY!

    " ... consumers SHOULD BE ABLE TO CHOOSE the credentials by which they want to identify or authenticate themselves. In particular, online platforms SHOULD ACCEPT credentials issued or recognised by national public authorities, such as electronic or mobile IDs, national identity cards, or bank cards."

    Or in other words: people should be able to choose to use ID cards as a credential online. - period
    Not be forced to do so - the text is explicit that there have to be a choice from the consumer.

  • by Roodvlees ( 2742853 ) on Thursday June 09, 2016 @04:52AM (#52280005)
    I'm totally in favor of free markets and companies trying to make profits. But the government should not be trying to guarantee profits for them.
  • Suspicious timing (Score:3, Insightful)

    by amias ( 105819 ) on Thursday June 09, 2016 @08:33AM (#52280625) Homepage Journal

    With the UK in the thrall of EU referendum I can't help think this would be a non story at any other time.

    Its alarming how keen the media is to stoke racist devisions , please treat them with the suspicion they are trying to make you feel about other races instead of accepting it as valid.

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