Risks of Recognition

Brandie M. Nonnecke
Context: By New America
1 min readSep 5, 2017

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The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees is rolling out a new digital ID program with plenty of potential benefits — and major cybersecurity implications.

A long line of women wait to register with UNHCR in Arsal, Lebanon. Photo Credit: UNHCR/ M. Hofer/ November 2013. Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 License. No changes were made to the image.

“Everyone has the right to recognition everywhere as a person before the law.” — Article 6, UN Declaration of Human Rights

Tired, hungry, and scared, she approaches the front of the line and is greeted by aid workers. They scan her eyes, catalog her fingerprints, and snap her photo. For the first time in her life, she now has formal identification — a digital ID that will give her access to a range of economic, social, and political services and rights. But, these benefits come with a cost. A digital ID can also be used to track her movements, behaviors, and establish a data trail that leaves her vulnerable to human rights abuses.

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PhD, Founding Director of @CITRISPolicyLab @citrisnews @UCBerkeley, Former Fellow @AspenPolicyHub & @WEF, #AIforGood & #TechforGood Advocate, Tech Policy Wonk.