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by iasay 1457 days ago
Yes the police for sure, but this is normalising full ID verification everywhere.

At some point there will be a situation where you cannot do anything because you are in the 0.01% of the system that is broken.

2 comments

That's already the case. Since you must be able to identify yourself when asked, you have an obligation to carry your identification with you.

I believe the obligation to carry identification, and to have identification are enforced differently in different countries / states. But there is more information here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obligation_of_identification

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_identity_cards_in_the...

> At some point there will be a situation where you cannot do anything because you are in the 0.01% of the system that is broken.

Not wanting to identify yourself and not being able to identify yourself are two seperate topics. I sympathise with people who fall outside of the system, but e-identity is currently a matter of convenience for people who already have identity documents and are seeking easier ways of accessing services online.

>Yes the police for sure, but this is normalising full ID verification everywhere.

The UK is not a part of the EU any longer, for pretty much all of the rest member states, that has not been an issue for quite some time... save for Ireland.

>At some point there will be a situation where you cannot do anything because you are in the 0.01% of the system that is broken.

The issued ID plastic cards would be as useful when you are present in person.