Digital ID is coming: Will Americans lose freedom in the name of security?



America was founded on liberty and rights, but Big Tech and Big Government keep trying to take them away.

The latest example comes from the National Institute of Standards and Technology, whose National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence is currently working to develop wide-reaching digital IDs. More specifically, NIST is collaborating with tech companies and banks to link mobile driver’s licenses with people’s finances. The broader purpose is to work toward developing a digital ID for everyone that centralizes all their personal information, supposedly to boost cybersecurity and provide more convenience for financial transactions.

The more digital ID is developed in America, the more alternatives to digital ID will become rarer, more complex to use, and, eventually, outlawed or severely restricted.

Working with various associations, the California DMV, the Department of Homeland Security, Microsoft, iLabs, MATTR, OpenID Foundation, and various large financial institutions, including Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase, NIST has now contracted various digital identity specialist companies to implement the project.

According to NIST digital identity program lead Ryan Galluzzo, NIST’s advances are about allowing people to present ID in the most convenient and secure way possible while still allowing them to rely on traditional physical ID.

“We want to open up the use of modern digital pathways while still allowing for physical and manual methods whenever they may be necessary.”

By linking banking information with mobile driver's licenses, NIST will move one step forward to implementing a central digital ID that contains people’s private information. NIST promises that this new digital ID acceleration “will address ‘Know Your Customer/Customer Identification Program Onboarding and Access’ which will demonstrate the use of an mDL and/or Verifiable Credentials (VC) for establishing and accessing an online financial account.”

The project will move forward in three main steps. According to NIST, it will aim to standardize and promote “digital ID standards” while still respecting and maximizing “privacy and usability.” This digital ID project is currently in the build phase.

With technology that now analyzes how people walk and breathe and their irises, to identify them beyond a shadow of a doubt, and phones and GPS systems geolocating individuals at almost every moment of the day, digital ID is ripe for abuse by an authoritarian government or malicious actors. The easier it becomes for a citizen’s important data to be accessed by law enforcement, government, or bad actors, the closer we get to a digital panopticon in which citizens are constantly tracked and subject to potential suspicion while having no recourse to alternative methods of payment or identity.

This move forward linking mobile driver's licenses with banking is bigger news than it appears on the surface. While it can be easily justified and explained as necessary, innovative, and forward-thinking, the more digital ID is developed in America, the more alternatives to digital ID will become rarer, more complex to use, and, eventually, outlawed or severely restricted. What starts as an incentive or benefit all too often becomes a mandate and a requirement down the road. NIST’s moves to build up a more powerful and connected digital ID will inevitably lead to Americans becoming less free, regardless of how these policies are framed or how much of a positive spin they are given.

Meta To Pay Texas $1.4 Billion For Collecting Users’ Biometric Data Without Authorization

Meta is required to notify the attorney general's office of any future activities that might fall within the scope of the state's biometric data laws.
David McNew/Getty Images

Biden’s insane border plan counts on foreign adversaries to rigorously vet migrants

No one can expect Cuba, Nicaragua, or Venezuela to happily run criminal histories, even if they had the capacity to do so.

Chinese-owned TikTok can now collect your kids' faceprints and voiceprints



Chinese-owned TikTok made a quiet update to its privacy policy in the United States this week. The massively popular social video app gave itself permission to collect biometric data of U.S. users, which includes faceprints and voiceprints.

"We may collect information about the images and audio that are a part of your User Content, such as identifying the objects and scenery that appear, the existence and location within an image of face and body features and attributes, the nature of the audio, and the text of the words spoken in your User Content," the new privacy policy that was introduced on Wednesday stated.

"We may collect biometric identifiers and biometric information as defined under US laws, such as faceprints and voiceprints, from your User Content," TikTok said. "Where required by law, we will seek any required permissions from you prior to any such collection."

TechCrunch reported, "Only a handful of U.S. states have biometric privacy laws, including Illinois, Washington, California, Texas and New York. If TikTok only requested consent, 'where required by law,' it could mean users in other states would not have to be informed about the data collection."

TikTok claimed they may need to "collect this information to enable special video effects, for content moderation, for demographic classification, for content and ad recommendations, and for other non-personally-identifying operations."

"In response to various questions about what data the company is now collecting on users, how it defines 'faceprints and voiceprints,' what data it might collect in the future, and what it might do with that information," a TikTok spokesperson told The Verge on Thursday, "As part of our ongoing commitment to transparency, we recently updated our Privacy Policy to provide more clarity on the information we may collect."

The current expansion of TikTok's privacy policy is especially concerning since TikTok lost a class-action lawsuit filed in the United States for collecting and sharing personal and biometric information of users without their consent. The suit alleged that the app collected "highly sensitive personal data" to track users and target ads to them. TikTok rejected the allegations but said it didn't want to spend time litigating the issue. TikTok settled the class-action lawsuit by paying out a whopping $92 million to the users.

"As part of the settlement, TikTok has agreed to avoid several behaviors that could compromise user privacy unless it specifically discloses those behaviors in its privacy policy," according to The Verge. "Those behaviors include storing biometric information, collecting GPS or clipboard data, and sending or storing US users' data outside the country."

In December 2019, TikTok Inc. and parent company ByteDance Technology Co. agreed to a $1.1 million lawsuit over alleged children's privacy allegations. The lawsuit alleged that the kid-friendly app collected children's information without their parents' consent.

"The companies compiled and disclosed personal information and viewing data, including lip-syncing videos, of children who used their Musical.ly app, and sold it to third-party advertisers," according to Bloomberg.

In February 2019, TikTok's parent company agreed to pay $5.7 million to settle a Federal Trade Commission over alleged Children's Online Privacy Protection Act violations. The company purportedly collected personal information from children illegally, according to the FTC, which added, "This is the largest civil penalty ever obtained by the Commission in a children's privacy case."

TikTok is a short-form video-sharing social media platform with nearly 100 million users in the U.S. that is especially popular with younger people – over 47% of TikTok's users are between the ages of 10-29. TikTok is owned by the Beijing-based ByteDance Ltd., one of China's biggest tech companies.

Last summer, then-President Donald Trump attempted to ban TikTok in the United States over spying concerns and the app's connection to the CCP. Last year, then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said using TikTok puts "your private information in the hands of the Chinese Communist Party." The Defense Department previously warned TikTok has "potential security risks associated with its use." The Transportation Security Administration, U.S. Army, and U.S. Navy prohibited TikTok from being used on government-issued phones.

"What the American people have to understand is all of the data that goes into those mobile apps that kids have so much fun with and seem so convenient, it goes right to servers in China, right to the Chinese military, the Chinese communist party, and the agencies which want to steal our intellectual property," said former White House trade adviser Peter Navarro.

In the end, the Trump administration was not able to institute a TikTok ban.