Following the initial launch last year, Google Wallet now supports Driver’s Licenses and State IDs in three more states: Arizona, Colorado, and Georgia.

  • flamingo_pinyata
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    1 year ago

    I understand the reason - it’s technically possible. But from practical side having your government id depend on your phone is risky. Phones are more likely to get stolen, phones can run out of battery…

    Even more true for payment cards. If something happens to your phone - you’re fucked. No way to pay for anything and no way to contact anyone for help.

    • Salamendacious@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      It’s obviously opt-in the state governments aren’t mandating that you use your phone. The people in these states would have to make the choice on their own. If my state allowed it I’d probably do it just to have a backup.

    • The Dark Lord ☑️@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I haven’t run out of battery on my phone in years. On top of that, these are often stored in what’s called “power reserve”. That’s basically a small amount of battery allocated to the most important things. Even when your battery dies, you can still access things like ID, credit card, home key, and transit card, for around 5 hours.

      So what happens if you drop your phone off a bridge? Same thing as if you drop your wallet off a bridge. Except that someone may find the wallet and sell your ID to be used for identity theft.

      Phone thefts are way down. It’s really hard to get into a locked phone. And if accessing a credit card isn’t bait enough to steal a phone, an ID won’t be. Wallets DO get stolen though, and there’s no passkey protection on those. Getting new ID and credit cards take way longer than getting a new phone too.

    • 30p87@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Not the same, but I use my phone as a replacement whether possible. I still have my cards with me, it’s just faster to whip out my phone, press one button and eg. pay without PIN, because it unlocked already by touching the fingerprint sensor or looking at it. In contrast, using the card to pay would mean pulling out the wallet, somewhere, searching for the card, waiting for the machine to accept it and entering the PIN, then you’d need to put everything back.