Compliance Monitor
Heads-up on digital IDs
In the next few years, UK consumers will move from relying on passwords for accessing their financial accounts to quicker, safer systems of digital IDs built around biometrics and libraries of background data. Neasa MacErlean outlines the path ahead as well as its opportunities and regulatory challenges for compliance officers.
Is the development of digital ID inevitable?
Yes, and it is well-developed in several other countries,
making the United Kingdom something of a laggard.
Being able to prove the identity of individuals online is as necessary for modern economies as the building of roads and electricity
grids, according to the
Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose at University College London. It is a necessary precursor to seizing "the opportunities of this century", say Sir Tony Blair
and William Hague, in a 2023
joint report, offering a stepping stone to "radically change the way in which our public services are delivered". [1] Such a scheme is
particularly useful during unstable times, as it helps the economy continue to function - as Ukraine has found through its
Diia app, [2] which enables Ukrainians to carry out transactions anywhere in the country and which is proving "significantly beneficial
during the current conflict", according to
UK Finance. [3] But, while digital ID could become universally available in the UK, lawyer Philip James, a Global Privacy & Cybersecurity
partner in Eversheds Sutherland, thinks "there still remains a reluctance" to make it mandatory. Whatever happens, the Financial
Conduct Authority will play a significant role, as will, of course, the new UK Government.