On The Vaccine Passport Dilemma

Mack DeGeurin
10 min readAug 21, 2021

Earlier this month, New York City (where I’m currently based) crossed into uncharted territory in the US’ fight against Covid-19 and its frustratingly determined variants. With Delta cases surging and residents quickly becoming accustomed to loosened restrictions, Mayor Bill De Blasio officially made New York the first US city to require workers and customers show proof of vaccination to enter a plethora of businesses, from indoor dining and gyms to billiards halls and strip clubs.

Digital vaccine passports — apps that can be scanned by businesses to verify an individual’s vaccination status — are a critical component to the city’s plan for verifying the jab status for its nearly 8.4 million residents. Though New York is the first US city to issue such a mandate, others around the country are paying close attention, and many are creating their own state-specific digital passports.

Almost immediately, news of New York’s effort a firestorm of debate over the privacy and societal implications surrounding these still new vaccine passports. Though experts largely agree these apps represent one of the best bets to help safely reopen society, they also, in their present form, risk being hijacked by surveillance-friendly autocrats eager to expand their all-seeing reach.

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Mack DeGeurin

Texas expat, freelance journalist. Work has been featured in New York Magazine, Motherboard and Medium. I’m on Twitter @mackdegeurin