- From: NIKOLAOS FOTIOY <fotiou@aueb.gr>
- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 2026 23:10:36 +0000
- To: Filip Kolarik <filip26@gmail.com>
- CC: Manu Sporny <msporny@digitalbazaar.com>, public-credentials <public-credentials@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <3BF74192-A165-48EB-834A-EEA957652EF1@aueb.gr>
Hi Filip, EUDI restrictions apply to government IDs and not to digital credentials in general. In my opinion the more restrictions there are on the use of government IDs in online services the better for individuals. I respectfully disagree with your statement “Many private actors request ID routinely”, at least in Europe this is not the case. Few private actors request your ID and even fewer make a record of your ID. Best, Nikos 14 Φεβ 2026, 12:28 πμ, ο χρήστης «Filip Kolarik <filip26@gmail.com>» έγραψε: Hi Nikos, With physical documents, governments have no control over who asks to see a government-issued ID, and simply asking isn’t illegal. Many private actors request ID routinely; not because there’s some explicit legal support granting them special status. The real issue isn’t who asks, it’s misuse. That’s a separate topic entirely, and restricting wallets and verification through controlled or approved apps doesn’t address it. If anything, it locks the ecosystem, limits beneficial use, and risks negatively impacting innovation and economic growth while favoring large incumbents. Wallet or verifier restrictions do not solve the problem; they just introduce new ones and risk preventing the EU from being competitive once again. It could end up being another case of billions spent on a project that fails to deliver, again. Best, Filip https://www.linkedin.com/in/filipkolarik/ On Fri, Feb 13, 2026 at 11:10 PM NIKOLAOS FOTIOY <fotiou@aueb.gr<mailto:fotiou@aueb.gr>> wrote: > No, that's government overreach into the private lives of individuals. > I should be able to show my government ID to anyone I choose to show > it to. It also works against the government because your credentials > become less valuable as less people can rely on them. How do you get > onto the verifier list? These are policy decisions that often get > gamed by large organizations. This is our fundamental difference in thinking. In my opinion individuals do not feel restricted for not be able to show their government ID, it’s the other way around: they do not want to show their government ID. In the real world there are restrictions who can ask your government ID. In my opinion it should be the same in the digital world. Best, Nikos
Received on Friday, 13 February 2026 23:10:45 UTC