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The Almighty Buck Google Apple

Apple, Google Wallets Now Support California Driver's Licenses (techcrunch.com) 60

Residents of California can now store their driver's license or state ID in Apple or Google Wallet, according to an announcement today. Apple also shared the news. TechCrunch reports: Californians with an ID in the Apple Wallet or Google Wallet app can use their mobile devices to present their ID in person at select TSA security checkpoints and businesses. They can also use the app to verify their age or identity in select apps. Other states that already support digital driver's licenses and state IDs include Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Maryland, and Ohio.

Apple, Google Wallets Now Support California Driver's Licenses

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  • I've had my Colorado license in Apple wallet for a while, now. Some places still want to see it in the Colorado ID app, but what's the big deal with California, did they try to block it or something before it was approved? Is it because of the size of the state? The Colorado ID app has a weird feature where parts of the drop shadow around your ID will move when you tilt the phone. I've noticed it and sometimes when I show it, I notice the security person tilting the phone to make sure.
    • It's special because the population of California is huge. A LOT of people will be doing this. Even if it's a stupid idea. Then they'll drive to other states. The cops will pull you over there and they'll laugh as you try to use a digital driver's license. This will push the progress forward, as it might not be accepted like this at first. Eventually, all states will be doing it, and it will be weird to have a physical card.

      • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Thursday September 19, 2024 @08:32PM (#64801337)

        Eventually, all states will be doing it, and it will be weird to have a physical card.

        Who would want their only version of important cards on a mobile device susceptible to damage or outside influence.
        Imagine being stranded without your government ID or money after an accident because your phone was submerged in liquid too long or fell/suffered some other high impact. Or just ran out of battery.

        • by spitzak ( 4019 )

          I'm pretty certain the actual fact that you have a drivers license is stored in the cloud. Losing your device won't lose it.

          • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Thursday September 19, 2024 @09:00PM (#64801393)

            I'm pretty certain the actual fact that you have a drivers license is stored in the cloud. Losing your device won't lose it.

            What, the cop asks you for ID and you give them your cloud login ‘cause your ID battery died? Not exactly an ideal solution for every situation involving identification. Look on the shitty side too. Failure to provide a drivers license will almost certainly earn you a nice fine when pulled over. Rack up more fines if your auto insurance ID battery died too. So much for getting a warning.

            • by spitzak ( 4019 )

              Yea I think you will be stuck if your device breaks.

            • What, the cop asks you for ID and you give them your cloud login ‘cause your ID battery died?

              Even cars from 15 years ago have USB chargers built-in. Older cars can use a USB adapter in the cigarette lighter.

              Rack up more fines if your auto insurance ID battery died too.

              A photocopy of your insurance card is sufficient. It can't be lost like a DL. You can just print a replacement.

              • What, the cop asks you for ID and you give them your cloud login ‘cause your ID battery died?

                Even cars from 15 years ago have USB chargers built-in. Older cars can use a USB adapter in the cigarette lighter.

                Boy, with all that technology I’ll bet no one runs their battery dead. Like, ever. And of course everyone is very responsible with EVs and fuel gauges. Especially the procrastinating generation who view 8 miles left on a tank with a 5-mile commute, as “plenty”.

                Rack up more fines if your auto insurance ID battery died too.

                A photocopy of your insurance card is sufficient. It can't be lost like a DL. You can just print a replacement.

                Glove boxes are like clothes dryers. They can make shit disappear like your left sock. Sure it can be lost. Or left in a wallet at home. A printed replacement is what people are carrying to their court session after the fact.

            • The CA ID in wallet is not for use by a person, it's for a scanner. So it's only good at TSA airport checkpoints.

              The digital wallet CA ID is NOT for use with the police. You still need your plastic DL card.
          • Using that logic, why is it necessary for anyone to carry an ID card then? Can't the police just look you up by your name and address and view the photo on their cruiser's terminal?

            • Using that logic, why is it necessary for anyone to carry an ID card then?

              It isn't.

              Can't the police just look you up by your name and address and view the photo on their cruiser's terminal?

              Requiring a DL to be carried is a great pretext for the police to harass teenagers and black people.

        • Who would want their only version of important cards in a wallet or bag susceptible to damage, theft, or loss.
          Imagine being stranded without your government ID or money after an accident because your wallet was dropped, forgotten, lost, or stolen. Or just forgotten at home.

          • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

            Imagine being stranded without your government ID or money after an accident because your wallet was dropped, forgotten, lost, or stolen. Or just forgotten at home.

            Those are all things that can happen to your phone, too. But I can drop my wallet hundreds of feet off a balcony and if I pick it up off the ground the cards still work. Money can be left in a pocket of a pair of pants and run through a washing machine and be usable afterwards. Neither of these applies to a smartphone.

      • > Then they'll drive to other states. The cops will pull
        > you over there and they'll laugh as you try to use a
        > digital driver's license.

        No, they won't. Look up the "full faith and credit" clause of the constitution. It's why Nevada and Arizona and Georgia and the rest have to let you drive on their roads with a California license in the first place. Once California (or another state) decrees that a digital license is a full legal replacement of the card with no more need for the latter; that is

    • I've had my Colorado license in Apple wallet for a while, now. Some places still want to see it in the Colorado ID app, but what's the big deal with California, did they try to block it or something before it was approved?

      California was slow to adopt RealID. For a while CA residents had to take their passports to the airport since the CA state IDs were not RealD compliant.

      RealID required a valid US Passport, a certified US birth certificate, a certificate of birth abroad of a US Citizen, a certificate of Naturalization / US Citizenship, a certified Permanent Resident card, or a valid foreign passport with a valid US visa. You know, immoral and objectionable documentation to some of those in the CA state legislature.

      • Ahhhhhhh, I see. It's a California thing. Yeah, heaven forbid we have IDs.
        • by drnb ( 2434720 )

          Ahhhhhhh, I see. It's a California thing. Yeah, heaven forbid we have IDs.

          And the DMV complained about having to look at all those documents, how it would slow them down and make them inefficient.

      • Some places still want to see it in the Colorado ID app

        It seems the CA DL in the wallet is only designed to be used with scanners. You waive a phone over the scanner, even if locked, it assembles information to send, shows you and asks for approval, and then sends it if you OK it.

        So wallet DL is only useful at TSA airport checkpoints right now. CA says it will not be accepted by police, continue carrying the plastic.

        The dedicated CA DL app has all those human interaction displays and features. Although there is also some automation via QR codes.

      • California was slow to adopt RealID. For a while CA residents had to take their passports to the airport since the CA state IDs were not RealD compliant.

        Why? I still don't have a RealID, and I fly about 6 times a year.
        I know eventually the Feds will start enforcing that, but they haven't yet.

        • by drnb ( 2434720 )

          California was slow to adopt RealID. For a while CA residents had to take their passports to the airport since the CA state IDs were not RealD compliant.

          Why? I still don't have a RealID, and I fly about 6 times a year. I know eventually the Feds will start enforcing that, but they haven't yet.

          Interesting. I didn't go RealID until my license expired and I had to visit the DMV anyways. However I brought my passport to the airport, I wanted to make sure I left the airport on an airplane, rather than in the car I just arrived in. :-)

          • Yup, I got a passport for the same reason.
            I've been loosely tracking them pushing back enforcement. It's currently set to 2025. We'll see if it doesn't become 2026, because last I read the number of people with RealIDs will still somewhere around half.
    • by drnb ( 2434720 )

      Some places still want to see it in the Colorado ID app,

      Oops, responded to myself not you :-).

      It seems the CA DL in the wallet is only designed to be used with scanners. You waive a phone over the scanner, even if locked, it assembles information to send, shows you and asks for approval, and then sends it if you OK it.

      So wallet DL is only useful at TSA airport checkpoints right now. CA says it will not be accepted by police, continue carrying the plastic.

      The dedicated CA DL app has all those human interaction displays and features. Although there is als

  • Many times I've left home without my wallet or remembered at the last minute that I need to carry my license with me, so I had to run upstairs to grab it. I would much rather not have to carry it. Yes, I would rather give the physical card to someone for ID, especially a police officer, but at least with this system I have the option of using the digital version and leaving my wallet at home.

    Since I can use Google Pay instead of using my physical credit card, and I have a digital library card, there's not

    • I suppose using my phone with an ATM is next.

      My banking app will let me generate a 1 time code for a cash withdrawal at an atm without using my actual bank card.

    • Re:I want this (Score:4, Insightful)

      by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Thursday September 19, 2024 @09:17PM (#64801423)

      Many times I've left home without my wallet or remembered at the last minute that I need to carry my license with me, so I had to run upstairs to grab it. I would much rather not have to carry it. Yes, I would rather give the physical card to someone for ID, especially a police officer, but at least with this system I have the option of using the digital version and leaving my wallet at home.

      Since I can use Google Pay instead of using my physical credit card, and I have a digital library card, there's not much left where I need my wallet unless I'm using cash. I suppose using my phone with an ATM is next.

      By your own admittance, you stated you would rather give a physical card to a police officer. Shit Happens. Shit that can require law enforcement rather easily (such as a car accident that’s not your fault) What will be your actual preference in that situation, since you stopped carrying a physical card? You “especially” sure you want this?

      Smartphones are already a panic-attack inducing device when suddenly lost or stolen for a lot of people. Really not sure how freeing a pocket from a wallet is going to help with that. Phone gets stolen and you have no ID. No insurance cards. No ATM capability. Not even a phone number to remember and call. (Actually you probably did have one number written down..ironically sitting in the wallet at home. :-)

    • But for my money if a cop pulls me over there is no way in hell I want to try and hand him my phone. Never mind the privacy implications The added hassle of it is a great way to piss off a idiot with a gun and the right to find me hundreds of dollars cost me a hell of a lot more than that.

      And if you're a person of color as it were yeah I would not fuck with this.
      • by drnb ( 2434720 )
        The Apple Wallet CA DL is not to be used by police. Or people in general, at least directly. Its to be used by a scanner, so its pretty much limited to TSA check points at airports.
    • I suppose using my phone with an ATM is next.

      That already works in many countries.

  • I went thru the setup. It was pretty straightforward.

    Scan the front and back of the drivers license. San your face (look forward, turn head right, turn head left, look up). Then it sends the info to the DMV for authentication -no explanation of how that works, but I doubt anyone will visually verify that the me in the video looks like the official photo (I don't -the photo is a few years old).

    Once the DMV authorizes it, I will play with the settings, and see what the options are and how much information

    • You can launch it from either the app on an unlocked phone, or with a swipe on the screen of a locked device.

      By default, it presents a bar code that can be scanned. Alternatively, you can tap at an NFC reader.

      It says that there are different categories of sharing (name, over 18, over 21, full info, etc.) and that you will be prompted to confirm you wish to share the information that is being requested by the reader device. I do not have a reader device so I cannot confirm what will be shared or how that w

  • I've never looked into these. Say you are stopped for a traffic violation. Can you bring it up without having to unlock your phone? Might not be such a good idea to hand your phone unlocked over to ANYONE.
    • Yes, exactly. Even if you are not a criminal, this will unlock your phone allowing police access to everything. The police may see things that appear illegal starting a chain of events where you need to prove your innocence. And already police have stolen nudes from women when handed unlocked phones, so this is not theoretical.

      • You do not need to unlock the phone to show your DL.

        You do not need to hand the phone to the cop.

        From the announcement:

        "When presenting an ID in Apple Wallet, only the information needed for the transaction is presented, and the user has the opportunity to review and authorize the information being requested with Face ID or Touch ID before it is shared. Users do not need to unlock, show, or hand over their device to present their ID."

        California DL in Apple Wallet [apple.com]

    • In Denmark you need to unlock the phone, and press the validation mode button. Then the police or other authority will use their own device to scan the fast changing QR code on their device. Just to make sure it is not a static something you copied.

      Here the phone will not have to leave your hands.

      • by antdude ( 79039 )

        But they can take your phone and run! :P

        • Sure, and they could, right now, simply grab your phone, hold it up to your face, and say 'open your eyes or you're getting pepper sprayed/tazed/shot' and unlocked it that way.
  • Unlocked phone (Score:4, Insightful)

    by dotslashdot ( 694478 ) on Thursday September 19, 2024 @10:02PM (#64801511)
    Yes, please give a the police, TSA, or other law enforcement official your unlocked phone so they can exfiltrate all of your data and chats. This seems like a dumb idea.
    • Yes, please give a the police, TSA, or other law enforcement official your unlocked phone so they can exfiltrate all of your data and chats. This seems like a dumb idea.

      It's not dumb if you're the government.

      A lot of stuff is being "made convenient" now for phones that used to be considered by us old farts to need to be kept secure. Fortunately, it's still acceptable to have it separate and NOT ON THE PHONE in most states.

    • It should be able to produce a QR code that they'd scan and never take possession of the phone itself.

      Otherwise, you'd want some sort of "Valet mode" that locks the phone down other than showing the DL info and nothing else until the phone is unlocked.

    • Yes, please give a the police, TSA, or other law enforcement official your unlocked phone

      You do not need to unlock the phone to show your DL.

      You do not need to hand the phone to the cop.

      From the announcement:

      "When presenting an ID in Apple Wallet, only the information needed for the transaction is presented, and the user has the opportunity to review and authorize the information being requested with Face ID or Touch ID before it is shared. Users do not need to unlock, show, or hand over their device to present their ID."

      California DL in Apple Wallet [apple.com]

      This seems like a dumb idea.

      Especially if you didn't RTFA.

    • Yes, please give a the police, TSA, or other law enforcement official your unlocked phone so they can exfiltrate all of your data and chats. This seems like a dumb idea.

      That's not how it works. It's designed to work with a scanner. You waive phone near scanner, even if locked, it shows you the info to be shared, you approve, it get transmitted.

      It is not a replacement for the plastic card. You still have to carry the card. This only works in locations that have these scanners, current the TSA checkpoints at airports.

  • Imagine the future when all records are digital, how easy the 1984 scenario of erasing history and altering history will be for them... including erasing a person. The AI tools will be able to erase them from photos, etc. all completely automated. That's frankly terrifying...
  • In Denmark we have had digital drivers license for close to 2 years, they are working as a valid ID, and there is even a validation mode in the app that can verify another persons ID online - This is a fast changing QR code. You can show/hide your SSN depending on use.

    Thus we have stronger identity validation using that - than any of the physical means.

  • Something else that can be hacked.
  • SO how many states will recognize this as valid ID. I Know Ohio has Digital ID but will not accept it at the voting booth. How many people want to hand the police an unlocked phone? What's so darn hard keeping a paper thin piece of plastic er on you? what does this solve? Doenst seem to make things more secure. Not sure its more convenient? I can see it now your in a car crash you phone goes flying and breaks and now the office says license and registration? Ooops!!!
  • I thought TSA was federal, how can a state decide when TSA can accept the digital vs physical card?

    • by drnb ( 2434720 )

      I thought TSA was federal, how can a state decide when TSA can accept the digital vs physical card?

      When the state complies with the federal regulations and the federal electronic protocols for the federal scanners.

      Recall how not long ago CA residents had to bring passports to airports since the CA DL cards were not federal RealID compliant. Now they are. But now wallet apps have to be compliant with the federal scanners, Apple and Google are. But the state still has to make all the info the feds want available for transmission to the fed scanners.

  • Just last week I downloaded the California DMV app and added my driver license to it. Easy.
    It includes a verified copy of my driver license and also a QR code that can be used to verify the license.

    I like this better than Google or Apple Wallets because I don't trust either of them to keep my information private.

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