As the world begins to consider how to safely show that travelers have been vaccinated for covid-19, this solution may hold the key.
Is there a greater travel fear than being stranded abroad without your passport?
At every juncture of travel, the passport feels like the nuclear football, the faberge egg and the only thing you simply cannot afford to lose. But what if you don’t actually need to bring one? Instead, relying on information stored in a blockchain system to securely identify you – as you. It’s coming, perhaps.
The idea all centres around a concept called KTDI, or “Known Traveller Digital Identity”, a technology developed by the World Economic Forum, with blockchain backed data integrity.
Blockchain can’t build you an ice cream maker or make you more interesting, but it is the most robust form of keeping data from being corrupted or improperly altered by others. So far, Canada and The Netherlands are the first two countries to sign on, and test flights were conducted in 2019 and real live general passenger tests for 2020 are still expected.
The idea is that a person can manage their own digital travel identity, using verifiable pieces of information like biometrics, travel history and any other relevant pieces of information collected by trusted government authorities at borders and other points of contact.
Rather than each government or authority keeping your info to themselves, they agree to rely on each others trust data points, and to share them with others.
In the simplest terms, it’s a system of trust, and the more times you get a checkmark of trust when an immigration authority backs up your trusted data, the better your travel profile.
Amazingly, it’s all managed via your phone, rather than a passport, which allows this to kick off long before you land. You securely send your travel info far before reaching a border, which with any and all hope will make entry into a destination remarkably fast.
You may be able to practically just walk through, in due time, all with more security than any system currently in place.
Here’s a deep dive into it all, via the World Economic Forum research piece.
The blockchain technology allows passengers to observe the data collected on them at airports, such as biometric scans, citizenship papers and relevant visas, but also to manage when, and with whom they are shared.
In other words, you know when a border is requesting your information because you choose to share it. Thanks to cryptography, no personal data is observable to anyone outside of the trusted authorities – aka governments – who, are part of the program that are able to request data.
“KTDI enables consortium partners to access verifiable claims of a traveller’s identity data so they can assess their credibility, optimise passenger processing and reduce risk. KTDI allows individuals to manage their own profile and collect digital ‘attestations’ of their personal data, deciding what data to share and when. The more attestations a traveller accumulates and shares, the better consortium partners, governments and other parties can provide a smooth and safe travel experience.”
So, what keeps someone from stealing your phone? A unique personal key is offered to each traveller, which makes the data incredibly secure, and all information is stored without personally identifiable info, in case of a hack or any other common world event these days. Perhaps most reassuring, you are able to manage and edit your profile with updated information.
Perhaps the biggest question is: if the passport already does this, why bother?
With more than 1.8 billion annual passengers expected to cross an international border by 2030, keeping cross border formalities more secure, but also faster than ever is crucial.
No one likes waiting in excruciatingly long lines, and thanks to the digital nature of the KTDI program, it will be quicker and easier for immigration authorities to verify and validate each traveller.
So, when and where? The first pilot program took place in 2019 with cooperation between Canada and the Netherlands, as well as Air Canada and KLM. Genuine, less controlled passenger flights are expected to continue to confirm accuracy and efficiency.
Success for KTDI is based upon a system of trust between governments, who agree that the data being presented to them is the most secure way of validating a traveller, so with any hope, many more governments will join the program in the years to come.
HT: YMMV