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Agreed it seems silly for each state to be implementing this themselves but I wondered if this has something to do with:
I dont know how the EU system works (beyond the high level info on the site) but i'm assuming the signed QR code is paired with the other ID such as drivers license (I think this is run individually be the states) to avoid folks sharing the same QR code. There's obviously other approaches to addressing this however :) Also surely using the EU system would be beneficial when travel opens up for both inside Australia and when Australians travel to EU destinations. |
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National Cabinet stated that:
While this may provide a short-term good user-experience, it depends on work being duplicated by every state, and all of them getting security, privacy and tech problems right - and solving for offline experiences. It's possible (but unlikely) that each state will come up with a system where integrated check-in could look like:
But even this does not answer the question: what do people living on borders and state-travellers show? Or even people without a smart phone? If the answer to this is "they fall back to the medicare provided PDF/wallet/IHS/app" then we're in a no better position than when we started.
Does anyone have ideas about how this could actually work for state travellers, or if there's a good reason for states and territories to be implementing this themselves?
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