So is this an argument? You're not comparing any real data either, just making a hypothetical comparison. Can I do that too?
Imagine if every state issued their own digital ID that was part of a national federated system of PKE. That is, each state trusts the certificate authority in each other state, and the fed trusts the states. There's some mechanism to sign into a federal website and to transfer money to a bank account, or perhaps a mechanism involving showing up to a postal office, who knows. Compare this to dispersing funds quickly but without any verification of identity.
By doing the work up front to be able to quickly verify identities it means that the fraud prevention happens before the fact.
Do you think the $76 billion would have been better spent on digital infrastructure or written off as fraud? And what about the next time there's a need for helicopter money?
You know the DoD is fazing out CAC and there's a lot of very cheap tooling around PKE digital IDs...
Imagine if every state issued their own digital ID that was part of a national federated system of PKE. That is, each state trusts the certificate authority in each other state, and the fed trusts the states. There's some mechanism to sign into a federal website and to transfer money to a bank account, or perhaps a mechanism involving showing up to a postal office, who knows. Compare this to dispersing funds quickly but without any verification of identity.
By doing the work up front to be able to quickly verify identities it means that the fraud prevention happens before the fact.
Do you think the $76 billion would have been better spent on digital infrastructure or written off as fraud? And what about the next time there's a need for helicopter money?
You know the DoD is fazing out CAC and there's a lot of very cheap tooling around PKE digital IDs...