this post was submitted on 16 May 2026
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His is why digital ID is bad.
No. A properly managed eid system like the EU digital wallet would be better.
You would not hand over any document to the hotel. They would ask the central authority server if you are who you claim. You would get a prompt to confirm that you allow the hotel to confirm your identity. The server would respond, yes you are indeed that person. End of transaction.
No data would be left to whatever security standard (or lack there of) that the hotel has. No critical documents stored on their end.
Whatever happened to just here is my money I will stay here and be done? Why does the hotel need to give a shit who i am that I am staying?
Laws requiring Hotels identify their guests.
Been awhile since I have been to the EU, that sounds like something stupid they would do. I imagine it would be France and Germany mostly.
Several countries I have been to recently I haven't even talked to anyone at the hotel, which is nice. I don't have to see the front desk at all, and the bell hop doesn't care.
Again, why can't I just pay and stay? It may be laws, but I am sick of this bullshit. People should be able to travel without state violence used against them.
And as we can see here, gathering information by the hotel is a horrible idea.
What happens if someone steals your phone?
Even if that was a vulnerability, they're never going to steal a million phones at once
Lastly if you are asking how you would deal with getting new credentials. There would be a mechanism similar to when you first get the electronic id where your previous device gets deauthorized and you authorize a new one.
All of these are allready solved problems at this point. We do this all the time with other credentials like online banking etc.
This varies by country, but in Norway for instance all of these things are already solved and online/phone banking is both safe and the most common way of doing things.
Loss/theft of phone is at worse a few phone calls and security questions to get it deauthorized (a properly secured phone would not be any significant hazard as mentioned in other responses) and authorizing a new device can be done with mail/SMS combo identification pr by showing up to a local office if you wanna do it that way.
It of course requires on device lock, like a pin or biometrics.
Also anyone with a nibble of security awareness will have their phone properly secured so it cannot be opened by anyone else.
If you run your phone without security pin or fingerprintint lock, this would be the least of your worries if your phone got stolen.
How are your banking apps secured?
Are you asking how you would confirm without your phone or asking about someone stealing your credentials or impersonating you?
To the first I'd ask how do you confirm identity if someone steals your wallet? But also, I'd probably be able to confirm with my watch as well.
To the second, my phone would be a brick before they ever got it unlocked.