Identification for Development It Is Not: ‘Inclusive and Trusted Digital ID Can Unlock Opportunities for the World’s Most Vulnerable.’- a Review

J. van der Straaten
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This review and annotated version of a July 2019 World Bank blog post on digital ID examines and challenges the favorable claims made about the benefits of digital ID by its main advocate, the World Bank and its Identification for Development (ID4D) practice. The essence of their claims is: digital ID includes those left out, and (digital) identification will deliver (economic) development. There is no satisfactory, robust evidence for these claims, which might well be the reason why the claims are mostly made in qualitative and, often, in ambiguous and vague terms. The champions also have ridden the wave of the Sustainable Development Agenda, especially with regards to ‘leaving no one behind’ (financial inclusion) and ‘SDG 16.9’ re ‘a legal identity for all by 2030’. These objectives have been married to digitization, digital ID and biometrics that the apostles of this agenda swish as magic wand (the ‘biometrics revolution’) that separates the waters and leads to the promised land in record time (even by 2022 according to one of the high priests). But scratch the surface and a different economic policy agenda becomes unmistakable. In fact the gospel comes down to: ‘service-oriented, digital ID’ will lower the cost of doing business. But at the same time it entails commodification of people’s data, and leads to ‘surveillance capitalism’. People’s rights to a legal identity are secondary, or, at best, will trickle down in the process. In this review we look at costs and benefits of digital ID in a more formal format, by looking at a number of relevant studies of benefits and costs of digital ID (and digital society) for the world, India, the United States, Zambia, Haiti, Ireland, the Netherlands, Uganda and the United Kingdom. In a next chapter we examine more specifically and quantitatively the claims that (new, digital) national ID systems make good on the promise of financial inclusion. Evidence to that effect, or to the contrary, is sparse. But what data there are—for the world, India, Ghana, Indonesia, Namibia, Pakistan, Uganda and Zambia—we present in this paper, and the data contradict the identification for inclusion gospel. That is especially ironic for Indonesia that holds the world record for digital ID project fraud (such fraud being common in digital ID projects). As for India: its Aadhaar ID, indirectly, led in 2019 to an explosion of social unrest, putting a blood-stained bookend to digital ID for unsustainable development, and laying bare the fallacy of Aadhaar as a source of ‘robust ID.’
它不是发展的身份识别:“包容和可信的数字身份可以为世界上最脆弱的人打开机会。——一篇评论
本文是2019年7月世界银行关于数字身份的博客文章的回顾和注释版,对数字身份的主要倡导者世界银行及其身份识别促进发展(ID4D)实践对数字身份的好处所作的有利主张进行了审查和质疑。他们主张的实质是:数字身份包括那些被遗漏的人,(数字)身份将带来(经济)发展。这些说法没有令人满意的有力证据,这很可能就是为什么这些说法大多是定性的,而且往往是含糊不清的。这些优胜者还顺应了可持续发展议程的潮流,特别是在“不让任何一个人掉队”(普惠金融)和“可持续发展目标16.9”即“到2030年人人享有法律身份”方面。这些目标已经与数字化、数字身份和生物识别技术结合在一起,这一议程的倡导者们把这些技术称为魔杖(“生物识别革命”),它们能在创纪录的时间内(根据其中一位高级祭司的说法,甚至到2022年)分离水体,引领人们到达应许之地。但只要拨开表面,就会明白一个不同的经济政策议程。事实上,这个福音可以归结为:“以服务为导向的数字身份”将降低做生意的成本。但与此同时,它需要将人们的数据商品化,并导致“监视资本主义”。人们获得合法身份的权利是次要的,或者充其量是在这个过程中涓滴而下。在这篇综述中,我们通过对世界各国、印度、美国、赞比亚、海地、爱尔兰、荷兰、乌干达和英国的数字身份证(和数字社会)的收益和成本的相关研究,以一种更正式的形式来研究数字身份证的成本和收益。在下一章中,我们将更具体和定量地研究(新的、数字的)国家身份系统对金融包容性承诺的承诺。支持或反对这一观点的证据很少。但是,我们在本文中提供的数据——印度、加纳、印度尼西亚、纳米比亚、巴基斯坦、乌干达和赞比亚——与包容性福音的识别相矛盾。这对于保持数字ID项目欺诈世界纪录的印度尼西亚来说尤其具有讽刺意味(这种欺诈在数字ID项目中很常见)。至于印度:它的Aadhaar ID间接导致了2019年社会动荡的爆发,为数字ID的不可持续发展画上了一个血迹斑斑的句号,并暴露了Aadhaar作为“强大ID”来源的谬误。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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