digital identity
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Mobile Digital Identity to be a $7 Billion Opportunity in 2024, as Operators Become ID Brokers

A new report from Juniper Research has found that the use of unique mobile identifier services, which provide identity verification through SIMs, will generate over $7 billion for mobile operators in 2024. This is up from an expected $859 million in 2019; a growth of over 800%.

The new research, Digital Identity: Technology Evolution, Regulatory Analysis & Forecasts 2019-2024 noted that, particularly in emerging economies with limited government identity provision, mobile phones will become the primary source of identity for over 3 billion people by 2024. These will be used heavily because they are simpler to scale than card-based identity, particularly in areas of Southeast Asia and Africa, where pre-existing government-issued identities are less common.

Operators are Not Alone

The research anticipated that other digital players will provide apps on top of this framework, with over 600 million discrete third-party identity apps using the operator-provided functions. These third-parties will typically monetise API calls from identity requestors; cutting operators out of this space, but the latter could potentially leverage their position in the future to gain further revenue.

in emerging economies with limited government identity provision, mobile phones will become the primary source of identity for over 3 billion people by 2024.

Smartphone vendors will also capitalise on digital identity via the production of devices with advanced functionality, including biometric identity capabilities. Juniper Research expects over 5 billion smartphones globally to have some form of biometric in 2024, nearly 90% of all smartphones. However, the research warned that several services will still need traditional documentation to onboard users initially.  As a result, it forecasts that traditional forms of identification will not be entirely displaced by mobile forms in the near future.

“Service onboarding is still an opportunity for fraud, despite advances in biometric technology”, remarked research author James Moar. “Many services require a tie back to an existing form of ID, which typically means analogue identification. As a result, facial recognition will become key as it can bridge the digital-physical gap more easily than other biometrics.”

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