Not really, in this case. It was the government issuing the new format, so it was the early adopter; some services are even interconnected and share information in real time.
In this case, it was more about banks, telecoms, energy and water companies.
Sequence5666@lemmy.world 11 months ago
This sounds very efficient of your country. Where are you from ?
qyron@sopuli.xyz 11 months ago
Portugal
Hupf@feddit.de 11 months ago
cries in federal country
qyron@sopuli.xyz 11 months ago
This is one those things that intrigues me.
If joining a federal government, the principle implies there is the recognition there is something good to contribute for said federation but also handicaps the federation can assist in solving.
This follows that when one member of the federation develops a solution for a problem, other members emulate it. The same way, when the federal level develops a solution for a problem, all members apply it in the exact same terms: no if, but or commas.
Yet it seems this is never what happens when dealing with federal governance.
crushyerbones@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Hah I was about to say they tried this in Portugal but a lot of agencies (especially foreign ones) simply have no capacity to deal with digital certificates.
Hell I went to a public university a couple of years ago and they demanded I show them a stamped document proving that I’m employed.
qyron@sopuli.xyz 11 months ago
That’s a different beast. Private entities are still lacking on that front but catchinf on fast.
Shialac@lemmy.world 11 months ago
For real… maybe we will get something like that in germany in like a hundred years when they finally stop using fax machines lmao