How long until certain commenters in this sub try to spin this as bad news somehow?
XenorVernix on
As a frequent traveller I find it slightly amusing how much of a big deal people are making of this. In the past year and a half I’ve travelled to Mexico, Thailand x2 and Singapore. All of which allowed me to use e-gates. I’ve even used them in an EU country (Portugal).
This is just the way modern countries are going – stamps are an old method that are being phased out in many places as it reduces costs (less border staff). I reckon in a decade a passport will just be a photocard without space to stamp anything.
Fully digital passports on your phone are even being trialed now in Finland but it will be a while before the whole world switches to them. That is the future though.
Artistic_Data9398 on
This is so goated. I travel like 10 times a year and this is going to save me so much time.
I had a small window with the metric scanning passport before they cut it off in 2023 and it was heaven!
revpidgeon on
I feel betrayed. We voted to control our own destiny with our own control points. /S
Mrmrmckay on
The EU countries could have always done this. They chose not to.
Thandoscovia on
How very kind of the EU to restore to us the same privileges as we’ve always given them at our borders
magneticpyramid on
I genuinely could not care any less about this, it feels like very poor value.
After-Dentist-2480 on
But, but the British people voted for longer queues and greater inconvenience at EU airports!! How dare they betray Brexit like this?
/s
Normal_Sail8131 on
Is there any chance this could unfuck the western Channel ferry routes? Was waiting for two hours at Caen last summer.
_Zso on
Was absolutely ridiculous they stopped us using them.
All the work to get them up and running was done, everyone had paid for the passports with the chips, airports had bought all the infrastructure, all the data stored on them was still accurate etc. etc.
Purely a punishment move.
Independent_Plum2166 on
Okay, as someone who doesn’t travel (and hasn’t since before Brexit) what does this mean?
AnomalyNexus on
Was there a technical reason for stopping this in the first place? I recall some drama around brexit about access to databases…maybe that?
Cause more egate use means less inefficient human desks = taxpayer money saved. So seems to me there is an inherent incentive to funnel anyone with reasonably trustworthy chip passports through them…regardless of which side of brexit fence the country is on
12 commenti
How long until certain commenters in this sub try to spin this as bad news somehow?
As a frequent traveller I find it slightly amusing how much of a big deal people are making of this. In the past year and a half I’ve travelled to Mexico, Thailand x2 and Singapore. All of which allowed me to use e-gates. I’ve even used them in an EU country (Portugal).
This is just the way modern countries are going – stamps are an old method that are being phased out in many places as it reduces costs (less border staff). I reckon in a decade a passport will just be a photocard without space to stamp anything.
Fully digital passports on your phone are even being trialed now in Finland but it will be a while before the whole world switches to them. That is the future though.
This is so goated. I travel like 10 times a year and this is going to save me so much time.
I had a small window with the metric scanning passport before they cut it off in 2023 and it was heaven!
I feel betrayed. We voted to control our own destiny with our own control points. /S
The EU countries could have always done this. They chose not to.
How very kind of the EU to restore to us the same privileges as we’ve always given them at our borders
I genuinely could not care any less about this, it feels like very poor value.
But, but the British people voted for longer queues and greater inconvenience at EU airports!! How dare they betray Brexit like this?
/s
Is there any chance this could unfuck the western Channel ferry routes? Was waiting for two hours at Caen last summer.
Was absolutely ridiculous they stopped us using them.
All the work to get them up and running was done, everyone had paid for the passports with the chips, airports had bought all the infrastructure, all the data stored on them was still accurate etc. etc.
Purely a punishment move.
Okay, as someone who doesn’t travel (and hasn’t since before Brexit) what does this mean?
Was there a technical reason for stopping this in the first place? I recall some drama around brexit about access to databases…maybe that?
Cause more egate use means less inefficient human desks = taxpayer money saved. So seems to me there is an inherent incentive to funnel anyone with reasonably trustworthy chip passports through them…regardless of which side of brexit fence the country is on