Region
Latin America
Enables service providers to collect a KYC packet of profile information
No
Transparency in processes to access, review, edit and delete one's identity data
Unknown
Allow digital authentication
No
Allow individuals to use a SSO or esign facility to authenticate themselves through a single government portal
Unknown
Claim to have a digital identity
Unknown
Collects or uses biometric data
Unknown
Data Protection Act
No
Digital identity has legal status
Yes
Entities other than the owner or operator use the digital identity infrastructure
Unknown
Governance structure responsible for de digital identity
Unknown
Identity act establishes the accountability of the ID executors to the ID authority
Unknown
Identity act or civil registry act
Unknown
Identity authority is subject to courts oversight
Unknown
Identity infrastructure enable at least two sectoral use cases
Unknown
Identity system is under the purview of Freedom of Information Law
Unknown
Legally binding redressal mechanism
Unknown
Name of the identity
Carnet de la Patria Cédula Nacional de Identidad
Organizations providing funding
Unknown.
Organizations providing technical support
ZTE
Personal data breach notification
No
Procedural rules for the ID
Unknown
Qualitative status for implementation
As early as 2008, the Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE began helping Venezuela develop a system similar to the identity system used in China to track social, political, and economic behaviour. By 2018, Venezuela was rolling out its "carnet de la patria", a smart-card "fatherland" ID card that was being increasingly linked to the government-subsidised health, food, and other social programmes most Venezuelans relied on for survival.
Quantitative status of implementation
Unknown
Secondary act or policy for digital identity
Unknown
Transparency about collection, storage and sharing of personal data
Unknown
Type of institutional governance structure
Unknown
URL