Pretty sure they're not supposed to take your phone. The point of a digital document is that you don't have to hand in anything. Scan the QR code and they can run as many background checks on the data they want. You'll still have your phone.
Privacy
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Not supposed to != wont. Police regularily do things that they arent supposed to and as long as people naively consent by giving their phone they can get away with whatever they want i would think.
In Brazil, the officer just uses their own phone to scan a validation QR on the ID app, at no point your phone leaves your hand and in a few seconds the officer has what they need. Shouldn't this be the case in the EU? AFAIK the officers only take your physical ID to check the number, so if you're using the app they shouldn't need to confirm that as the info is already validated
Isn't it impressive that we in Brazil sometimes create the best and most simple solutions to problems, but no one will imitate us and will keep insisting in their problematic systems, because we are the third world and supposedly can't get anything right? It's sad when we end up replacing our own good things, because even we think we're inferior in everything and can't come up with a good solution for anything.
Say what you will about the country, but gov.br and PIX put everything else to shame and no one even came close to something like that
They went as far here in Ukraine as making some services exclusive to those who have the app. The official government app for digital documents and services, Diia, also has stupid integrity check, which makes it unable to be installed from Aurora Store, which makes me cut out from such services, because I don't have Google Services installed. By the way, there are Google trackers in the app.
Yeah, welfare here is mostly app/phone based. You can technically get around it, but it requires visiting a dwindling number of centres very regularly and waiting in long queues.
Yup, if you hand them your unlocked phone they can look through it.
They don't need to take your phone with them. They literally can just scan the code, because it sends all the info to their screen, that they were gonna look up anyway.
No way the government implemented an app for this use case. That's extremely inefficient.
I thought you actually tried, that they took your phone?
Illinois at least passed a law to limit the consent given when using a digital ID with a police officer such that they’re ONLY allowed to use it for ID and not snooping, but that’s the only state to do so.
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/10/should-i-use-my-states-digital-drivers-license
On iOS you can enable Guided Access and restrict what one can do, for example disable touch and lock it to an app, until you enter a Code. I imagine Android will have something similar.
This obviously doesn’t protect against electronic forensics, but it does protect against just opening different apps and searching through the phone manually.
Yes, Android has app pinning. But they still have access to anything the app gives them.
They can see my ID on the phone. But if they want to take it, then no, I don't have that ID on me. But then, I live in the US where digital ID isn't valid.
It is valid in some states. OP raises an excellent point. I live in the U.S. and have the digital ID on my phone, but I won't be handling it to law enforcement. I'll make sure I have the physical copy when I'm driving.
Digital licence is all I have used for about 7 years. Police here are careful never to reach for a phone as they can't legally. You display the licence and give it a shake to animate it and they copy the number down in their notebook. If the police ever did illegally take a phone I would wipe it and replace it and lodge a complaint.
They may have similar protections in Europe. People often post opinions on social media without checking facts. I get why on commercial social media where everything is rage bait. But i don't know why people can't take a few minutes to check local laws before posting here.
Why is nobody mentioning that by installing it and authenticating, there is sweet fuck all you can do to stop them tracking your movements and downloading your whole address book so they can see who you Associate with?
Taking the phone isn't the problem if they are already in it.
You have to explicitly allow that, at least on android. However, most people hit allow and don't think anyways :/
In most phones it is possible to set permissions (to contacts, locaton, etc) for every app.
If you are on android you can use screen pinning. That way phone won't get locked and bother the police but they can't switch to any other app without your password.
But I don't know how much I'll trust an app by government. Maybe in Europe that app is Open source.
Wouldn't trust a gov app in europe either. But then again i don't trust any app and have them firewalled at least .
Hi, Your dedicated local Secret Service agent here.
We don't need your smartphone to access your data. We have surveillance equipment for that. That is why we can scan the qr code of your ID app and do the checks we need.
If you want us not to track you, you need a degoogled smartphone and use cash exclusively. Also you could use a vpn while you browse the interwebs, but we ll still be, eventually, able to see where you browse.
BTW we don't stop randomly ppl on roadblocks. You or your car or your route or all of the above was of concern for us.
You're absolutely right about the danger of giving up your phone, if the police wanted to take it from you. By sticking with traditional documents you remove any pretense they might have to try. It is not a stupid call, it's just less convenient - but then, security is always a compromise with accessibility.
I just double checked on my phone, on Android you can pin the current app, that limits access for the user to only that app. Unpinning requires you to essentially unlock the phone again. I wouldn't hand my phone to a pig either, but if I pinned the app, it would be secure enough for a traffic stop.
For people with iPhone you can do this too.
Go to settings and pull down with your finger to get the search box to appear, then search for “Guided” and click “Guided access”.
Enable this setting as well as toggling “Accessibility shortcut”. Now you can open an app and triple click the lock button and select guided access.
Then on this screen you can press start in the top right or options in the bottom left to refine the controls, for instance:
- Side button
- Volume controls
- Motion
- Software keyboards
- Touch
- Time limits
Now the phone is locked in that app and to come out of it requires the passcode.
As others already stated there are solutions already to pin apps and to be honest, I feel I would not give the phone to a policeman like that.
On the other hand, what I'm more concerned about is giving the access to my phone's data through different permissions to my government.
For example this is the list of permissions for the Hungarian government app: https://reports.exodus-privacy.eu.org/en/reports/hu.gov.dap.app/latest/#trackers
Nah, I'll just carry my ID card around.
Not in Australia where it is illegal for the police to touch your phone.
Pit it on another phone that you keep in your car or another profile with nothing else on it
There's a good chance they have a Cellebrite in their car and will copy your entire phone's storage over.
And you'll get a tinfoil hat as a reward
Yeah because the police using a commercially available and ridiculously cheap device to copy data from your phone is totally unbelievable. I must be the crazy one.
News flash, they're not FBI tier ultra classified tools anymore, you can find them on eBay for less than $1000. There's a good chance that's cheaper than the phone you have right now. You think a police department who is already intent on scrolling through your phone while "checking your ID" wouldn't just put one in every cruiser?
that's odd. in south africa while we don't have a digital license the physical ones do have a code. they scan the code and that's it. they never take the license unless they asking for a bribe.
That means if I used the digital version, they would had unlimited access to all my digital life. Photos, emails, chats, from decades ago.
Bare minimum, it would take a substantial amount of time and resources to harvest data from every phone of every driver passing through a particular checkpoint. Not that I'd ever recommend handing over my phone to a cop, but this kind of data transfer isn't trivial. And its not clear what a street cop is going to do with 10 GB of accumulated vacation photos.
On the flip side, if you have an Automatic Backup feature on your phone, its going to a cloud computer somewhere. And that cloud computer is almost certainly compromised by the state digital security agency (and probably a number of foreign security agencies). At that point, it doesn't matter if you've got a physical id or a digital one, just knowing who you are is enough to tie you back to that digital archive.
But... again, what is it that front-line state agents are planning to do with all this data? That's never been made particularly clear.
Convenience always has a cost
- Do not have a mobile device
- Do not install anything proprietary or governmental on that device you don't have
- Use borderline secure (GrapheneOS) OS on that device you don't have and don't unlock it if demanded unless your health and/or life is in danger
To add to this, a lot of what keeps us safe is the friction of bureaucracy. Authoritarians cannot micromanage every decision you make or round up every person they want because those actions take time and resources that aren't infinite. But you can reduce the time and resources required if you make identification more convenient and therefore enforcement more targeted. Maybe now they can justify making you present ID every time you pay cash at Starbucks, buy a backpack, get on a bus, use a bike share, watch hot snuff porn, you name it.
We have that app and I never give my phone to anyone. Nobody asks me for it, not even the cops. They just note the details and take it with them.
Oh, and the cops don’t care about your photos or messages when all you’ve done was exceed speed limit by 10km/h.
In normal countries
Police in the US have admitted that traffic stops are just a way to search people and find bigger charges. Cops like that are absolutely nosing around your phone.