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by lmm
632 days ago
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Isn't non-repudiation something we want for cases like this? If e.g. a car rental place checks your driving license before renting you a car, and then you get into a crash, no-one wants you to be able to claim that you never showed them your driving license and they never checked. |
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The opponent may still claim that the car rental place is showing a copy that was obtained illegally, and not in holder presentation. To avoid such a claim, the car rental company should ask for a qualified e-signature before providing the car key. The signed data can include any relevant claims that both parties confirm as part of the transaction. To provide similar assurance to the customer, the company should counter-sign that document, or provide it pre-sealed if it is an automated process.
Note that with the EU Digital Identity, creating qualified e-signatures is just as easy as presenting digital credentials.