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Alongside its big public push for AI investments, the U.K. government is also playing a virtual card to catapult itself into the 21st century. Today it announced plans to launch a secure digital wallet to manage government-issued credentials, alongside a chatbot — built-in collaboration with OpenAI — to interact with the main GOV.UK portal. Today, it dubbed the chatbot “chat-uk” and said it will be a part of a wider portal and app.
The first two cards it plans to add to its wallet will be a virtual driver’s license and a virtual veteran card for people who have served in the military. It plans to launch the service later this year, it said in a press conference today. The GOV.UK portal will be online in 2025, but it has already started testing the chat service, and it’s also already opening up for ordinary users to test it, said Peter Kyle, the U.K.’s Secretary of State for technology — even if some of the responses seemed a little odd.
“It is really important the public start to understand that increasingly, in an online world, and government is moving to an online world, that we will interact at an earlier stage so that we can use the power, the insight, and the volume of interactions that the public can provide in testing,” Kyle said in a press conference today in London. “So yes, the chat system did start talking French midway through a testing series, but it was a mistake we learned from.”
The developments come at a crossroads for AI advances.
On one hand, the Labour government has doubled down on the idea of building out an AI economy in the country — partnerships with private AI companies to invest more in their operations here, more infrastructure such as data centers and a supercomputer to support AI services, and a big commitment from the government to invest in AI services itself. First up, today it unveiled a raft of new AI tools, all still in development: a multi-functional AI assistant for government employees called “Humphrey”; a push to build more consumer-facing AI tools; and more data sharing between government departments to help them build and run AI services.
On the other hand, there remain many questions about how AI services will work in the years ahead. It was only a year ago that the U.K. took a leading role in a wider global conversation about AI safety: how the new wave of services being built by companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, Mistral, and many others will impact jobs, user privacy and data protection, copyright, and how AI might get misused for nefarious purposes such as to create misinformation, in aid of malicious hacking, and more.
Today, Kyle claimed that in its testing of its new chatbot, there “hasn’t been a single instance” of the chatbot yet being “jailbroken” or returning false information in its “heavy” testing so far.
A push for more digital services in the U.K. comes at the same time as the U.S. is doubling down on the role tech will be playing in that country. Yesterday, President Trump, on his first day in office, made official his new government “efficiency” effort, dubbed DOGE and led by technology entrepreneur Elon Musk. Trump also repealed an executive order from his predecessor President Joe Biden that sought to reduce AI risks to government, consumers, and businesses. That means that setting up and running safety tests around AI systems are no longer required.
The government said that its new GOV.UK Wallet allows users to securely store government-issued documents on their phone and use them easily when needed, it said. This could be more convenient when, say, you are on the move, and you want to only have a phone and no physical wallet.
The digital driving license, Kyle said today, will also be used to improve online and offline safety. In one example, he described how digital IDs could be used to provide age verification for certain online services, which has been problematic to secure to date. Notably, the U.K. is not exactly ahead of the game here. France has been offering a digital identity app since 2022.
“The technology will make use of security features that are built into modern smartphones, including facial recognition checks similar to those used when people pay using a digital bank card,” it said. “It means that digital documents will be more secure, even if a device is lost.”
There are no plans to make its digital wallet or other digital services compulsory, Kyle added, but he said they are working on the “compelling” and “desirable” nature of the services to get people to use them.
“Why can’t we aspire to have a satisfactory experience where people engage at the moment,” he said.
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Ingrid was a writer and editor for TechCrunch, from February 2012 through May 2025, based out of London.
Before TechCrunch, Ingrid worked at paidContent.org, where she was a staff writer, and has in the past also written freelance regularly for other publications such as the Financial Times. Ingrid covers mobile, digital media, advertising and the spaces where these intersect.
When it comes to work, she feels most comfortable speaking in English but can also speak Russian, Spanish and French (in descending order of competence).
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