Apple Launches 'Digital ID' Platform with TSA Backing - Slay News
Apple has rolled out its new “Digital ID” system to replace identification documents, including passports, with approval from the U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA).
The new platform, which Apple has literally called “Digital ID,” allows iPhone and Apple Watch users to store a digital copy of their U.S. passport in Apple Wallet and present it at TSA checkpoints.
The new platform is a major step toward a fully centralized, biometric identity system.
The feature lets travelers skip physical passports for domestic flights by scanning the passport’s photo page and embedded chip, then completing a selfie and facial-movement verification.
- Advertisement -At the checkpoint, users hold their device near a reader and authenticate with Face ID or Touch ID while seeing what data is being requested.
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Apple insists the process protects user privacy.
“Apple cannot see when and where users present their ID, or what data was presented,” the company stated in its Newsroom release.
Jennifer Bailey, Apple’s vice president of Apple Pay and Apple Wallet, added:
“With the launch of Digital ID, we’re excited to expand the ways users can store and present their identity — all with the security and privacy built into iPhone and Apple Watch.”
The beta rollout is already live across more than 250 airports, signaling a rapid shift toward a society where identity checks are frictionless, constant, and tied to a single device that can be tracked and controlled.
This normalization of digital checkpoints marks a turning point: biometric verification is being embedded directly into everyday travel.
Beyond airports, Apple plans to extend Digital ID to age verification for bars, venues, and online alcohol deliveries, transmitting only confirmation that a user is over 21.
TSA still advises travelers to carry physical IDs, as not all readers support the system.
But the implications run deeper.
What is being marketed as “convenience” is laying the infrastructure for unprecedented control.
- Advertisement -Digital ID centralizes identity into one government-linked gateway.
Once society depends on it, access to travel, services, and communication can be throttled or denied with a single automated decision.
Apple’s system is emerging alongside a global push for digital identity enforcement.
Across Europe, the EU’s eIDAS 2.0 framework requires every member state to issue a European Digital Identity Wallet, usable across borders for government and private services.
Technical standards for the program have already been adopted.
In the United Kingdom, Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government is advancing its own national digital ID framework, expected to become mandatory for Right to Work checks and other identity verifications before the end of the current Parliament.
The UK’s Online Safety Act adds strict age-verification requirements, tying access to online content to identity credentials.
Australia’s Digital ID Act, in effect since late 2024, created a nationwide verification system serving both public and private sectors.
Canada’s government is moving in the same direction.
Provinces such as British Columbia already rely on digital service cards, and federal planning documents outline ambitions to expand secure login systems nationwide.
Apple’s Digital ID builds on its existing “ID in Wallet” program.
The system already allows residents of numerous states, including Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, Hawaii, Iowa, Maryland, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, West Virginia, and Puerto Rico, to store driver’s licenses or state IDs in Wallet.
At the same time, many states are implementing ID-based age-verification laws for websites and social media platforms.
Texas, Florida, and Georgia require adult-content providers to verify user identities.
South Dakota and Wyoming have extended verification obligations to social platforms.
Some companies are choosing to block access in these states rather than collect sensitive ID data, underscoring how quickly the internet is being reconstructed around mandatory identity disclosure.
This sweeping shift raises urgent concerns.
Digital identity frameworks, whether introduced for “safety,” “efficiency,” or “convenience,” risk transforming normal daily life into a system of constant checkpoints.
When credentials become mandatory, every interaction becomes conditional, monitored, and potentially restricted.
Apple notes that users will soon be able to present their Digital ID at “additional select businesses and organizations” in the future, another sign that the infrastructure for a comprehensive digital identity regime is rapidly expanding.
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