Florida pulls the plug on digital ID app, surprising the few who used it

zohaibahd

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TL;DR: Florida has discontinued its Smart ID app, pulling it from digital stores and telling users to delete it. Slow adoption, lack of use by law enforcement, and "technical difficulties" are to blame. The state hopes to bring it back through a different vendor.

In an email to app users, the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (FLHSMV) said it is ditching its Smart ID app. The move seems temporary, as the message said the state wishes to bring the digital ID service back sometime in early 2025 after partnering with a new vendor. In the meantime, Florida residents will have to go back to using physical ID cards and driver's licenses to verify their identity.

The app allowed people to pull up and show their IDs to police and merchants on their phones instead of using a physical card. However, Florida residents were slow to adopt the service. The South Florida Sun-Sentinel noted that only around 95,000 of Florida's 17 million licensed drivers had activated the app as of April last year.

Many were surprised by the abrupt shutdown. One user took to X to vent his frustration, saying the whole thing was "a mess."

Many local police departments reportedly weren't using the app to verify identities because the legislation allowing digital IDs stipulates that Smart ID is not a replacement for a physical driver's license. Clearly, many residents felt that if you still have to have your physical ID on you, what's the point of the app?

Still, the complete shutdown with no interim solution feels like a misstep by the state agency.

"The Florida Smart ID applications will be updated and improved by a new vendor," the FLHSMV said in a statement. "At this time, [we are] removing the current Florida Smart ID application from the app store."

The department pointed to technical issues in late June before pulling the plug, saying its driver license systems are experiencing degradation of services while it works with a vendor to fix them.

Despite the setback, Florida is ahead of several states attempting to roll out digital ID cards and driver's licenses. The shift from physical plastic cards to smartphone-based credentials has been a glacially slow process across the United States. However, while state agencies and lawmakers are still trying to figure it out, smartphone makers are ready.

Apple added digital ID support to its Wallet app in 2021, with Google following suit in 2022. Maryland, Arizona, and Georgia support digital IDs added to Google or Apple Wallets. Louisiana is still trying to implement digital IDs, while New York follows Florida's example in developing a standalone app.

While the convenience and security benefits of ditching physical IDs are clear, the piecemeal rollout has been confusing. First, states had separate apps, then some supported storage in Apple Wallet but not Google's equivalent, and policies differed across jurisdictions. So it's not just Florida that's "a mess."

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Many local police departments reportedly weren't using the app to verify identities because the legislation allowing digital IDs stipulates that Smart ID is not a replacement for a physical driver's license. Clearly, many residents felt that if you still have to have your physical ID on you, what's the point of the app?

While the convenience and security benefits of ditching physical IDs are clear,

And therein lies the problem: if there are benefits to a digital ID replacing a physical ID (and I'm not sure what they are), then the physical ID simply can't be a requirement, or nobody is going to bother. It isn't like a physical ID is much of an inconvenience, anyways.

I would say that in an age of data breaches, digital IDs don't sound like a good idea, except that the government has this (and more) information digitized in their systems somewhere, anyways. Still, distributing those digital IDs seems like a potential vulnerability to that system.
 
95,000 sheep.

How many cyber attacks have hit government systems? You can't hack the card in my pocket.
You’ve gotta be kidding? Surely?
How do you think they verify your identity? Police go back to the station and manually lookup your paperwork?
 
You’ve gotta be kidding? Surely?
How do you think they verify your identity? Police go back to the station and manually lookup your paperwork?
I think its more matter of the danger of having every aspect of your life centralized into 1 digital space.
Phones, for most people , already have 90% of their life on it (bank / credit cards / photos / meta data , etc...)
Adding govt IDs to this mix just makes it that much easier for someone to steal your identity.

I, for one, will never put digital ID/drivers license on my phone. ever.
 
lol... how do you think they printed that card of yours? You don't think it came from a computer?

You’ve gotta be kidding? Surely?
How do you think they verify your identity? Police go back to the station and manually lookup your paperwork?
DMV and police obviously use computers. The point is, you can't delete or change the drivers' license I carry in my pocket. It's air gapped.
 
DMV and police obviously use computers. The point is, you can't delete or change the drivers' license I carry in my pocket. It's air gapped.
lol - so what? The first thing a cop (or any other official) does when they check your license is run it against a computer… if someone’s hacked that part, what good does your “unhackable” license card do you?
 
lol - so what? The first thing a cop (or any other official) does when they check your license is run it against a computer… if someone’s hacked that part, what good does your “unhackable” license card do you?
No system is 100% secure (quantum computing excluded). However, there are 100 different ways a digital ID on your phone can be maliciously extracted... where as municipal systems (most have military grade firewalls/encryption) , is only 1 way.

Its all about the percentages.
 
No system is 100% secure (quantum computing excluded). However, there are 100 different ways a digital ID on your phone can be maliciously extracted... where as municipal systems (most have military grade firewalls/encryption) , is only 1 way.

Its all about the percentages.
Also 100 ways your physical card can be… the most obvious being pickpocketing - which is probably the easiest…

Once your data is in the “cloud” it doesn’t matter
 
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