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Digital ID: Danes and Estonians find it ‘pretty uncontroversial’

about 19 hours ago
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For Danish teenagers, getting enrolled for MitID (my ID) has become somewhat of a rite of passage.From the age of 13, Danes can enrol for the national digital ID system, which can be used for everything from logging into online banking to signing documents electronically and booking a doctor’s appointment.But when they hit 15, all children and their parents receive a letter from the government advising them that from now on, the teenagers will receive their own official communications from authorities which will be sent to them via “digital post”, and they will need digital ID to access it.While there is the option to opt out and instead receive physical mail, few do.Today, 97% of the Danish population aged 15 and over is enrolled in MitID and only 5% of Danes have opted out of digital post.

The British government, which recently announced plans to introduce a digital ID scheme in the UK by 2029, said it would “take the best aspects” of such systems around the world, including those in Denmark and Estonia.Keir Starmer, the UK prime minister, has said the new ID would be an app-based system rather than a physical card and hold information on residency status, name, nationality, date of birth and a photo.It would be compulsory to have one to work in the UK.In Denmark, it has taken time to get people accustomed to using digital ID.Enabling people to use it for key apps such as banking was crucial to making it a success, said Adam Lebech, the deputy director general of Denmark’s agency for digital government, and the introduction of digital post had also helped drive take-up.

To try to improve access among older generations, volunteers have been trained to show elderly people how to use it,“Up until about 85 years of age the numbers [of those using digital ID] are very high and then it drops after that,” said Lebech,Like Britain, Denmark has never had a physical national ID card, but it has been developing its digital ID scheme since 2001,In 2022 it completed the move over to its third iteration, MitID, which Lebech said was more secure than its predecessor,It is usually used as an app on a smartphone or tablet but can also take the form of a code display or audio code reader for those who are not able to use an app.

Peter Christian Bech-Nielsen, the tech correspondent at the Danish newspaper Ingeniøren (the Engineer), said the digital ID scheme worked well and, so far at least, had come up against little friction from citizens,“Because we are a country where most people trust politicians and the public sector to a high degree, this has been pretty uncontroversial,” he said,But, he added, attitudes to surveillance were changing – in part because of increased awareness of online tracking and public discussion around the subject,“In Denmark in the last 20 years it has been going in one direction only, which is more surveillance, more control,At some point that’s bound to have some repercussions.

”At a time of increased instability and heightened threat of sabotage and hybrid warfare across Europe, digitisation also comes with considerable risk if the system goes down.“In the old days you could pretty much walk into a municipal office.You cannot really do that any more,” said Bech-Nielsen.“You have to book an appointment online.So that would be very hard [in the event of a digital system failure], which definitely makes us a less resilient society in terms of hybrid warfare.

”Lebech said the digital security threat level was constantly high, an “enormous challenge.” There were, he added, “constantly threats against it” – mainly from social engineering.“It requires constant development and constant battles against criminals,” he said.Sign up to This is EuropeThe most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environmentafter newsletter promotionIn Estonia, the establishment of a national digital ID card goes even further back.The idea started to gain traction in the 1990s after Estonia redeclared its independence from the Soviet Union and needed to rebuild its institutions.

“With limited resources but strong technical talent, the government saw digitalisation as a way to deliver public services efficiently and transparently,” said Kristiina Kriisa, a spokesperson for the e-Estonia Briefing Centre,“The goal was to streamline paperwork, reduce bureaucracy, and enable citizens to interact with the state from anywhere,”When Estonia first introduced its national digital ID card in 2002, it became one of the first countries in the world to connect a physical ID document to secure online authentication and legally binding digital signatures,Now citizens can use it to vote digitally, file their taxes and use online banking; an analogue option is maintained,The country also invested heavily in digital literacy in schools.

Kriisa said most Estonians were open to new ideas but there were some fears over privacy and security,“The government addressed this by building a legal and technical framework based on trust: citizens own their own data, can see who has accessed it, and are protected by strong data protection laws,” she said,“Due to this transparency, opposition was limited and never became a significant political obstacle,People could see the system worked and saved them time,”As well as using strong encryption and a public key infrastructure (PKI) – which means every card or mobile ID contains unique cryptographic keys – access to sensitive data is logged.

Citizens can view their logs themselves, and a national cybersecurity team is constantly on the lookout for threats,Leif Kalev, a political studies professor at Tallinn University, said on the whole, Estonians had “generally been quite willing to accept some reduction in personal freedoms in exchange for technological innovation and new opportunities”,But, he said, the growing body of digital data about individual citizens had prompted worries among some,“The biggest questions have arisen around the fact that the accumulation of digital data about individuals allows for increasingly extensive analysis and knowledge about a person, raising the issue of what the reasonable limits of this should be – from banks and stores to the police and tax authorities,” he said,There are also concerns about the vote-counting system for e-voting.

“Certainly, the growing computing power, such as with quantum computers, also poses challenges –the nature of which will become clear in time,” Kalev said.
technologySee all
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The gospel according to Peter Thiel: why the tech svengali is obsessed with the antichrist

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. For the past week, my brain has been marinating in billionaire Peter Thiel’s byzantine musings about the antichrist and Armageddon. At this point, I’m pickled.Why, you might ask, does it matter what a billionaire thinks about the antichrist? Good question!To help us understand, my colleagues Johana Bhuiyan, Dara Kerr and Nick Robins-Early have reported on a series of talks given by billionaire political svengali and tech investor Thiel:Over the past month, Thiel has hosted four lectures on the downtown waterfront of San Francisco philosophizing about who the antichrist could be and warning that Armageddon is coming. Thiel, who describes himself as a “small-o Orthodox Christian”, believes the harbinger of the end of the world could already be in our midst and that things such as international agencies, environmentalism and guardrails on technology could quicken its rise

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Instagram to bring in version of PG-13 system to protect children, says Meta

Instagram is to adopt a version of the PG-13 cinema rating system to give parents stronger controls over their teenagers’ use of the social media platform.Instagram, which is run by Meta, will start applying rules similar to the US “parental guidance” movie rating – first introduced 41 years ago – to all material on Instagram’s teen accounts. It means users aged under 18 will automatically be placed into the 13+ setting. They will be able to opt out only with their parents’ permission.While the teen accounts already hide or prohibit the recommendation of sexually suggestive content, graphic or disturbing images, and adult content such as tobacco or alcohol, the new PG-13 version will tighten restrictions further

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Bose QuietComfort Ultra 2 review: the most comfortable noise cancelling headphones

Bose has updated its top-of-the-line noise-cancelling headphones with longer battery, USB-C audio and premium materials, making the commuter favourites even better.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.The second-generation QuietComfort Ultra headphones still have an expensive price tag, from £450 (€450/$450/A$700), which is more than most competitors, including Sony’s WH-1000XM6

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What does the end of free support for Windows 10 mean for its users?

From Tuesday Microsoft will no longer offer free support as standard for Windows 10, an operating system that is used by millions of computer and laptop owners around the world.Figures for September suggest four in 10 of those using Microsoft Windows worldwide were still using Windows 10, despite the introduction of its successor, Windows 11, in 2021.After 14 October 2025, Microsoft will no longer provide standard free software updates, security fixes or technical assistance to Windows 10 PCs.This means computers running the software will still work but it will steadily become more vulnerable to viruses and malware as bugs and security holes are discovered.Microsoft says the more up-to-date system, Windows 11, “meets the current demands for heightened security by default”

2 days ago
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Cyber-attacks rise by 50% in past year, UK security agency says

“Highly significant” cyber-attacks rose by 50% in the past year and the UK’s security services are now dealing with a new nationally significant attack more than every other day, figures from the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) have revealed.In what officials described as “a call to arms”, national security officials and ministers are urging all organisations, from the smallest businesses to the largest employers, to draw up contingency plans for the eventuality that “your IT infrastructure [is] crippled tomorrow and all your screens [go] blank”.The NCSC, which is part of GCHQ, said “highly sophisticated” China, “capable and irresponsible” Russia, Iran and North Korea were the main state threats, in its annual review published on Tuesday. The rise is being driven by ransomware attacks, often by criminal actors seeking money, and society’s increasing dependence on technology which increases the number of hackable targets.The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, the security minister, Dan Jarvis, and the technology and business secretaries, Liz Kendall and Peter Kyle have written to the leaders of hundreds of the largest British companies urging them to make cyber-resilience a board-level responsibility and warning that hostile cyber-activity in the UK has grown “more intense, frequent and sophisticated”

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Equity threatens mass direct action over use of actors’ images in AI content

The performing arts union Equity has threatened mass direct action over tech and entertainment companies’ use of its members’ likenesses, images and voices in AI content without permission.The warning came as the union said growing numbers of its members had made complaints about infringements of their copyright and misuse of their personal data in AI material.Its general secretary, Paul W Fleming, said it planned to coordinate data requests en masse to companies to force them to disclose whether they used members’ data in AI-generated material without consent.Last week the union confirmed its was supporting a Scottish actor who believes her image was used in the creation of the “AI actor” Tilly Norwood, which has been widely condemned by the film industry.Briony Monroe, 28, from East Renfrewshire, said she believed that an image of her face had been used to make the digital character, created by the AI “talent studio” Xicoia, which has denied her claims

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Almost 70% of US adults would be deemed obese based on new definition, study finds

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‘Alarming rise’ in mental health stigma in England, research shows

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Abolishing stamp duty won’t solve Britain’s housing crisis – but this radical property tax just might | Josh Ryan-Collins

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‘You are constantly told you are evil’: inside the lives of diagnosed narcissists

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Ditch ‘shrink it and pink it’ women’s trainer design, say experts

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Trans people at risk of exclusion from many UK public spaces, rights expert says

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