Imagine youre moving to the destination of your dreams.

A tropical paradise by the sea?

An enchanting mountain village?

Europe has opened a door to a universal wallet. The web’s inventor wants to enter

A sun-kissed chateau surrounded by vineyards?

All you gotta do is pack a smartphone.

You catch a cab to the station, scan a turnstile, and board a train to the airport.

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On arrival, you stroll through abiometric corridorand straight on to your plane.

After your flight touches down, you collect a rental car.

You flash a digital drivers licence to unlock the door.

Margrethe Vestager, the EU’s competition commissioner, speaking at a podium

You drive to your new home.

If youre in the US, perhaps you also grab a gun.

All the purchases are invisibly approved.

Tim Berners-Lee and his Inrupt co-founder John Bruce have created a digital wallet

You walk out of thestoreand back into the car.

You park outside your beautiful new house.

Your face unlocks the front door and you collapse on the couch.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, one of the EU’s biggest supporters of the digital wallet

It’s free, every week, in your inbox.

Suddenly, panic strikes: youve forgotten your wallet.

Your cards, passport, health records, legal documents, and education certificates are all missing.

But then you remember: everything is safely stored on your phone.

Is it a digital dream or a high-tech nightmare?

Either way, its edging into reality.

Google and Apple wallets are now common tools for payments anddatastorage.

As the capabilities expand, paper documents and plastic cards will be thrown in the dustbin of history.

But the path to adoption is precarious.

Digital wallets still tightly restrain interoperability between apps and services.

Use cases are restricted and service availability is limited.

The tech has also provoked alarm about mass surveillance and data theft.

To fulfil their potential, digital wallets need guaranteed security, access, and compatibility.

In Europe, those guarantees are on their way.

Baked into an electronic wallet, the eID will store, display, and verify credentials.

All the while, the data will remain under their control.

The plan has won both praise and criticism.

Among the supporters is Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the world wide web.

He believes digital wallets can revive his founding vision: a free and open internet.

The universal wallet

Soon after the web was born in 1989, the tech giants took charge.

Berners-Lee watched with gloom as they harvested his brainchild for data.

Our information became the fuel of their business empires.

To take the power back, we need to regain control of our data.

Wallets enable that, Berners-Lee tells TNW.

The 69-year-old has a plan to prove that claim.

Through his startupInrupt, hes spent the past seven years building tools todecentralise the web.

This summer, they reemerged in a new product: a universal data wallet infrastructure.

Built on open standards, the system offers interoperability across multiple services.

Information is securely hosted in personal data pods, which enable reuse acrossapps, services, and AI systems.

But the user always retains control.

Its an approach that upends the prevailing model.

The European standard

Todays digital wallets are siloed point solutions with restricted applications.

The services they access frequently request data from users.

No single wallet can run them all.

Its as if I needed a different credit card for every store, says Berners-Lee.

Inrupts wallet opens the data silos and connects multiple apps.

Berners-Lee describes it as an extension of the web.

The eID could bring that tomorrow closer.

Berners-Lee has high hopes for the project.

He expects the EU to set an important bar for wallets and enforce a standard for credentials.

And organisations will think of more and more ways to serve them via their wallets.

The EU wallet

The eID is also arousing excitement atMitek, an identity verification firm.

The company provides authentication for banking services, biometrics scans at borders, and age-restricted purchases.

All these could benefit from the EUs plans.

Chris Briggs, chief product officer at Mitek, describes the eID as a true native digital identity.

He expects the project to set a global standard for wallets.

Briggs believes the plan hits a regulatory sweet spot: protecting consumers while spurring innovation.

That stands in stark contrast to progress across the Atlantic.

In the US, interoperability standards are severely lacking.

Accessibility is also inadequate.

The result is slower adoption of contactless payments and digital IDs.

Youve got to build an ecosystem, Briggs says.

Youve got to have standards and interoperability.

And the eID does that for Europe.

The scheme will obligate each EU state to offer a European Digital Identity Wallet.

Research suggests they will be warmly welcomed.

The surveillance backlash

Across the world, digital wallets are gaining popularity.

By last year, those numbers had increased to 50% and 30%.

And payments are far from the only attraction.

Arecent surveyfound that over half of consumers are also interested in other uses of wallets.

Among Gen Z and millennials, the figure rises above 75%.

They may soon get the opportunities they crave.

Ben Wood, chief analyst at tech research firm CCS Insight, envisions the functions rapidly expanding.

I expect digital wallets to become increasingly important as more aspects of daily lives are digitised, he says.

The eID can accelerate this process.

But the EU first has to calm the alarms about surveillance.

Critics claim the eID could enable governments to track our every move.

Last November, 552 scientists and researchers signed anopen letterwarning that the plan substantially increases the potential for harm.

Wallet firms say the fears are overblown.

They argue that the tech will actuallyimprovesecurity and privacy.

Briggs agrees.Your data is way safer inside a wallet than in your back pocket, he says.

Youre walking around with a piece of plastic that anybody can copy, photograph, or deepfake.

If you have cryptographic controls… it only helps the consumers stay safer.

Briggs believes an open framework is essential.

He also wants the EU to provide robust data protection and consent mechanisms.

A locked down eID would be a detriment to its adoption, he says.

It has to be built on a published open standard.

With this framework secured, the eID could push digital wallets deeper into our lives.

Berners-Lee imagines endless possibilities.

One wallet will integrate hundreds of services.

Fitnessapps, for instance, will fuse with medical records to enhance health analysis.

There is, however, one problem with the plan: smartphone batteries still suck.

One full charge provides around10 hoursof life on average not ideal when an app manages your life.

Sure, you could carry a power bank or two.

But that shatters the dream of moving home with just a phone.

Data firms have already proposed a solution.

Instead of opening an app, they suggest accessing the wallet through biometrics.

One day, your face alone could get you to that dream destination.

Forget the physical wallet you wont even need a phone.

Story byThomas Macaulay

Thomas is the managing editor of TNW.

He leads our coverage of European tech and oversees our talented team of writers.

Away from work, he e(show all)Thomas is the managing editor of TNW.

He leads our coverage of European tech and oversees our talented team of writers.

Away from work, he enjoys playing chess (badly) and the guitar (even worse).

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