activistpost | A biometric digital identity platform that “evolves just as you evolve” is set to be introduced in
“low-income, remote communities” in West Africa thanks to a
public-private partnership between the Bill Gates-backed GAVI vaccine
alliance, Mastercard and the AI-powered “identity authentication”
company, Trust Stamp.
The program, which was first launched in
late 2018, will see Trust Stamp’s digital identity platform integrated
into the GAVI-Mastercard “Wellness Pass,” a digital vaccination record
and identity system that is also linked to Mastercard’s click-to-play system that powered by its AI and machine learning technology called NuData. Mastercard, in addition to professing its commitment to promoting “centralized record keeping of childhood immunization” also describes itself as
a leader toward a “World Beyond Cash,” and its partnership with GAVI
marks a novel approach towards linking a biometric digital identity
system, vaccination records, and a payment system into a single cohesive
platform. The effort, since its launch nearly two years ago, has been funded via
$3.8 million in GAVI donor funds in addition to a matched donation of
the same amount by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
In early June, GAVI reported that Mastercard’s
Wellness Pass program would be adapted in response to the coronavirus
(COVID-19) pandemic. Around a month later, Mastercard announced that
Trust Stamp’s biometric identity platform would be integrated into
Wellness Pass as Trust Stamp’s system is capable of providing biometric
identity in areas of the world lacking internet access or cellular
connectivity and also does not require knowledge of an individual’s
legal name or identity to function. The Wellness Program involving GAVI,
Mastercard, and Trust Stamp will soon be launched in West Africa and
will be coupled with a COVID-19 vaccination program once a vaccine
becomes available.
The push to implement biometrics as part of national ID registration
systems has been ongoing for many years on the continent and has become a
highly politicized issue in
several African countries. Opposition to similar projects in Africa
often revolves around the costs surrounding them, such as the biometric
voter management system that the Electoral Commission of Ghana has been
trying to implement ahead of their 2020 general election in December.
Bright Simons, honorary VP of the IMANI policy think tank, has
questioned the “budgetary allocation” for the new system, claiming that
the “unnecessary registration of 17 million people all over again”
represents millions of dollars “being blown for reasons that nobody can
explain in this country.”
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