Most states rely on paper bureaucracy to ensure that the state can function and provide services. Paper bureaucracy has been part and parcel of how we maintain states and corporations since the Chinese invented the first paper bureaucracy systems of management 3000 years ago. But as you all probably know, bureaucracy kinda sucks. It costs a lot to maintain, and in the worst cases bureaucracy can turn a state into a labyrinthian monstrosity that can be near to impossible to navigate.

Estonia is a Baltic country that in recent years has been embarking on reform programs that are intended to change this. Estonia is a “Paperless state” meaning a state that has effectively removed all paper from it’s bureaucracy and replaced it with a digital state structure. In this short video I would like to introduce you to the digital state and argue for it.

  • @huginn
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    26 days ago

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estonian_identity_card

    It’s actually fascinating. Asymmetric keys with public keys hosted by the government and the private key in your ID.

    A 4 digit pin1 code is required to use the authorization key and a 5 digit pin2 is required to use the signing key.

    The average Estonian signs 50 documents per year using this method.