Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Medicine United States

California Offers Digital Record of Coronavirus Vaccination (apnews.com) 167

California on Friday started offering residents a digital record of their coronavirus vaccinations that they can use to access businesses or events that require proof they got the shots. From a report: The state's public health and technology departments said the new tool allows Californians access to their COVID-19 vaccination records from the state's immunization registry and includes the same information as the paper cards issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. To access the information, Californians will enter into a state website their name, date of birth and email or phone associated with their vaccine records and they will be asked to create a four-digit PIN. The record will include a QR code that users can save to their mobile phones. With nearly 20 million people fully vaccinated in California and proof of vaccination already required in some circumstances such as travel, state health officials felt there would be demand for the tool, though it remains optional, said Dr. Erica Pan, the state's epidemiologist.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

California Offers Digital Record of Coronavirus Vaccination

Comments Filter:
  • by Coopjust ( 872796 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @03:19PM (#61499406)
    New York State has a system called the Excelsior Pass [ny.gov] which allows you to present a QR code with a digital signature (prevents tampering) and I haven't found a single business that uses it. My understanding is it's pretty much sports/concert stadiums like Madison Square Garden, and that's it; plus, venues that have to admit people on proof of full vaccination/recent negative PCR test can do so in terms of alternate proofs (printout of negative test result, COVID-19 CDC paper card with no validation of identity, etc.)

    Seems rather useless if no business will use it... of course, maybe California businesses will view it differently than NY ones do.
    • by mark-t ( 151149 )
      It will probably still be required to do things like travel, but that's nothing that we haven't already seen.
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by dknj ( 441802 )

        when have we ever had to provide proof of health status before travelling?

        • when have we ever had to provide proof of health status before traveling?

          It's pretty common for (some) international travel ...

          • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

            by carton ( 105671 )

            when have we ever had to provide proof of health status before traveling?

            It's pretty common for (some) international travel ...

            No, it is not at all common in international travel. I have never been required to prove any vaccination when travelling to Europe, Middle East, or Asia over the last thirty years. I'm sure it happens, but it is not common, and the people on social media claiming this are generally in a position to know it. They are taking advantage of your ignorance and good faith to mislead. That should bother you.

        • https://www.tripsavvy.com/coun... [tripsavvy.com]

          That's just one example.

        • when have we ever had to provide proof of health status before travelling?

          It's a pretty good idea during a lethal pandemic, don't you think?

        • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

          Always, when the disease is endemic to a region.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • Seems rather useless if no business will use it... of course, maybe California businesses will view it differently than NY ones do.

      Can't speak for California, but in Germany it rolled out one day, and everyone was using it and accepting it the day after acting like it had always just been the way things were done. Is Excelsior Pass complicated, or otherwise a burden that makes people instead want to fling around bits of paper?

      • It requires installation of an app and then some identity verification to provision it to your phone.

        If you go to one of very few industries required to ask for proof legally (sports stadiums, concerts) of full vaccination or recent negative test, it's easier. Essentially no other business will ask, they'll put a sign at the door saying "vaccinated customers are no longer required to wear masks" and nobody asks for proof.
        • So the problem then is that there's not enough use case for it rather than the passport app itself being a failure? Because that level of complexity is the same in Germany.

          I honestly don't see this as any different to a digital credit card (Apple pay), or a digital drivers license. In all cases it's a substitute for something we carry with us anyway. But I guess the failure of the app in the USA is that it's not worth carrying said piece of paper in general?

      • by Corbets ( 169101 )

        Seems rather useless if no business will use it... of course, maybe California businesses will view it differently than NY ones do.

        Can't speak for California, but in Germany it rolled out one day, and everyone was using it and accepting it the day after acting like it had always just been the way things were done. Is Excelsior Pass complicated, or otherwise a burden that makes people instead want to fling around bits of paper?

        Yeah, here in Denmark we’ve had our “Coronapas” system for a couple months too. An app shows a QR code, and if you’re vaccinated, have tested negative in the last 72 hours, or have recovered from COVID-19 in the last 6 months, I think, the QR code can be scanned by another phone running the same app, and their phone comes up with a green screen. If one of those conditions isn’t true (QR code is generated after comms with a central server, meaning time data and such is included

    • Mismatched over here. :(

    • The Late Show (Colbert) is using it... But you can also use the card as proof. For some blindingly stupid reason they didn't make the card wallet sized, or just add covid to the wallet sized vaccine record cards some people carry that list other immunizations, so a phone pass seems much easier than a giant card that will get worn out quickly in a pocket.
    • by fgouget ( 925644 )

      New York State has a system called the Excelsior Pass [ny.gov] which allows you to present a QR code with a digital signature (prevents tampering)

      France has a similar QR code system that records your vaccination status. It is provided on paper when you get vaccinated and you can scan it in an app on your phone. You can then use either format whenever required, which would be when attending concerts, stadiums, or travelling abroad. Of course in all cases you can also provide a recent test (72h) proving you are not infected instead.

  • CDPH is apparently not aware of my vax status. Asks for name, dob, and phone number or email. Tried both. Record not found.

    Worthless.
    • Same. My name is frequently misspelled on data entry by gov types with an extra space or missing a capital letter, but every typical variant comes up with no record.

    • by bws111 ( 1216812 )

      When were you vaccinated? I know in the case of the similar thing in NY it won't let you get the digital pass until you are 'fully vaccinated' (2 weeks after second shot).

    • Likewise for me. Yes, I've been fully vaccinated for two weeks, and I tried both my cell phone # and the email address to which they sent me appointment information for my vaccinations.
      • by Octorian ( 14086 )

        Did you do it at a gov't run mass vaccination site, or via a private pharmacy or healthcare provider?
        I got my shots at a pharmacy, and the system can't find me either. I think someone forgot to import the data correctly.

    • Yeah, because it's not about a Vax or a virus... It's about DNA and identification for the maoists. The covid hoax is just a means for quickly collecting the data.

    • Sucks to be you.

      It worked instantly for me.

  • ...not surprisingly, it's useless.

    It has zero records for me, even though I was vaccinated many weeks ago by Walgreens. I only use one phone number and email address for this kind of thing and it has neither. The procedure to verify your info that it should already have, renders it impractical. Since I was issued a card showing my vaccination, I might as just take a picture of that and carry it on my phone, rather than fart around with an apparently incompetent government service that maintains an incomplet

    • by Octorian ( 14086 )

      I was also vaccinated at Walgreens, and it doesn't have my records either. I've now seen several mentions from people in the same exact situation.
      I think someone forgot to import the data correctly, or input it into some system at all.

  • I got vaccinated and immediately threw out my vax card.

    I have no intention of giving any money businesses who require proof of vaccination.

    • I got vaccinated and immediately threw out my vax card.

      I have no intention of giving any money businesses who require proof of vaccination.

      Don't worry. The delta variant will find its way to you soon enough. It doesn't care about your principles.

      • What are you smoking? If the vaccine doesn't work on a new dominant variant, there's even less reason to care if anyone's got one.

        • COVID doesn't care about your willful ignorance either. It's continuing to incubate, mutate, & adapt to its hosts. We have to get enough people vaccinated quickly enough so as to suppress new, vaccine-resistant variants, otherwise we have to start over again. Do you want to go back into lock-downs, overwhelmed healthcare services, & bodies piling up in their 100,000's? We're all responsible for doing our part to save people's lives. How misanthropic are you comfortable with being?
    • by SumDog ( 466607 )

      Thank god some fucking sense. Since when did we decide medical privacy laws weren't important anymore.

      If anyone asks me if I'm vaccinated, I ask them if they have HIV, or if they were raped as children. Your personal medical information is personal for a fucking reason.

    • by carton ( 105671 )

      Thank you, sir. You did a good thing.

      It should be none of their business. Everyone signed the form it was "voluntary" when they got their vaccine then forgot it all and started acting as if this were East Germany. I'm horrified by how fast they lose their principles with toy high stakes, not even real high stakes.

    • enjoy florida, florida-man ...

      (you know, the sooner the redhats self-reduce (so to speak) the better off the rest of us will be.)

      OT: kind of sucks that 'redhat' no longer refers to linux, but redhat was never one of the better distros, anyway. perhaps the term is actually more fitting than I had thought.

  • by AndyKron ( 937105 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @05:02PM (#61499736)
    If we're still in a state of pandemic emergency with 359 people dying of covid-19 yesterday, wouldn't 315 people dying on average every day of bullets to the body also be considered somewhat of an emergency?
    • If we're still in a state of pandemic emergency with 359 people dying of covid-19 yesterday, wouldn't 315 people dying on average every day of bullets to the body also be considered somewhat of an emergency?

      Where do you get those numbers? [washingtonpost.com] Sorry if you can't get to it due to paywall. WaPo gives you a few clicks a week or month then complains. Short version: 2020 had 19,380 gun related deaths not including suicides, which comes out to about 53 per day. That's about 4,000 higher than 2019, by the way.

      If you include suicides I think the numbers are typically two to three times as high, but that's still half of the figure you're quoting.

      How about cancer, which kills approximately 1,600 people daily? [webmd.com]

  • Just add this to the passport some way, that way other countries can control whether or not they want to allow you in based on your vaccination status. Just invalidate all current passports and require everyone to get a new one free of charge, using your current passport as prof of you being you and keeping the original expiration date. Those that don't comply, well too fucking bad, you don't have a right to enter other countries on your terms.

    That, and/or do this somehow on a national level. I got an em

  • by localroger ( 258128 ) on Friday June 18, 2021 @11:35PM (#61500544) Homepage
    Our forward-looking (yeah, right, it's true) LAwallet which is also your driver's license on your phone in Louisiana, now optionally also includes your vaccination status.
  • I got my vaccine 4 weeks ago at Walgreens (big, common pharmacy in CA). I don't remember if I put down my phone number or email when I did, so I tried registering first with my email and then with my phone number, in both cases I got a response that they weren't able to find my vaccine record.
  • And then, once the system is in full swing, and every business in Calif requires it, ransomware hackers take it over, and the whole Calif economy grinds to a halt.

    • yeah? what are they going to ransom?

      they might have my phone # and email and dob. no financial info, no location info, no age info, nothing else other than the 3 things I listed above.

      while its not zero info, its still not enough to have anything on me that they can use to extort.

      but anyway, comrade, thanks for the postski. enjoy your borscht.

New York... when civilization falls apart, remember, we were way ahead of you. - David Letterman

Working...