Major League Baseball's San Francisco Giants and New York Mets are
among the first big businesses to demand guests prove they tested
negative for the virus or are immunized against it. While the teams
welcome paper proof, they encourage downloading records onto Clear's
Health Pass feature for convenience.
As with mask mandates, such requirements are under attack from
Republican politicians and anti-surveillance activists, as
un-American intrusions on civil liberties. They fear businesses will
discriminate against the unvaccinated and unnecessarily amass
personal data.
Republican governors including in Florida and Texas last month moved
to bar some establishments from asking about immunization status,
though legal experts say door-checks are lawful to protect public
health.
Privacy group Electronic Frontier Foundation fears Clear and other
passport apps will hold data indefinitely and morph into consumer
trackers. Clear said users control their health records.
As a business based on replacing physical IDs, tickets and credit
cards with facial or fingerprint recognition, Clear has a huge
opportunity in emerging health-check rules that would familiarize
more people with its technology.
"Those experiences where you have to prove something about you – if
we can help empower the consumer to get through that more quickly -
that is our core business," said Catesby Perrin, Clear's executive
vice president of growth.
So far, Clear is among coronavirus health app frontrunners, with
partners including United Airlines for its Los Angeles-to-Honolulu
flights and the Venetian resort in Las Vegas for conventions it
hosts.
With fans anxious to get back to live sports, the Giants said its
promotion generated about 6,000 Clear downloads in April.
Nationwide, over 70,000 Health Passes are used for venue admission
weekly, Clear said, though the app is only starting to verify
vaccination status.
(Graphic: U.S. installations of Clear's app soar as venues reopen:
https://graphics.reuters.com/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS/VACCINE-APP/azgpoxorbvd/chart.png)
Also gaining traction is Excelsior Pass, funded by New York state,
which supports verification of tests and vaccinations within the
state. The app generated 500,000 certificates in April, and a
companion app for businesses to verify them had 40,000
installations, New York spokeswoman Jennifer Givner said.
Excelsior Pass developer IBM Corp is in discussions with additional
states, vice president Eric Piscini said.
In Europe, several governments have introduced apps that may be
required to access transport, gyms and restaurants, while the
27-nation European Union races to develop a "gateway" that will
enable them to work across borders.
Airline-backed Travel Pass and the nonprofit CommonPass, which was
installed an estimated 20,000 times over the last two months in the
United States, are being tested for international flight checks.
It remains unclear whether high-tech options to prove health status
will be widely required. At their best, apps would combat fake
records by validating information against public health databases,
but that is no small task.
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Piscini said it requires
accessing at least 64 separate databases in the
United States. But California, for example, has
yet to specify whether and when it will share
records with apps. Clear has
started testing access to vaccination records but declined to
disclose details.
New online tools that have gained a few thousand users, including
VaxYes and ConfirmD, are attesting to the veracity of vaccine
certificate uploads by having medical professionals weed out
forgeries.
"The demand (to automate) is there. There's just a myriad different
hoops to get through," said Mohammad Gaber, chief executive of
VaxYes developer GoGet. AIRPORTS TO BALLPARKS
Clear users upload a driver's license or other identity document and
take a selfie, which the system checks to make sure they match
before connecting to COVID-19 test results from hundreds of labs or
the proof of vaccination.
Some venues also require a symptom survey on Clear or an automated
temperature check at a Clear kiosk.
Users get a "green" pass with their headshot and a QR
code to show staff or scan at entrances. Venues pay for the system.
Texas music festival Electric Cookout adopted Health Pass to reduce
chances of an outbreak, said co-founder Pooja Shah. About 50 out of
1,200 attendees used it at an April event and received access to
special areas, she said.
Clear's primary service, priced at $179 annually, enables customers
to use biometric scans to skip ID card inspections at nearly 40 U.S.
airports. It also offers a free service enabling registered users to
jet through "Clear lanes" to access entertainment venues.
Combining subscribers and non-paying users, Clear, whose services
also go by Alclear and Secure Identity, said it has about 5.7
million members.
The company will not disclose financial results, but announced in
February a $100 million funding round with investors including
growth firm General Atlantic and the National Football League's 32
Equity fund.
Clear still has hurdles to become accepted and get people
comfortable with using it.
The Seattle Mariners baseball team promoted Clear's technology for
ID-less beer purchases from 2018 through 2019. The team said the
effort did not generate "meaningful" usage data.
Washington state's alcohol regulator said Clear cannot be the "sole
methodology for ascertaining legal age."
Clear said it was pleased with results and continues to educate
regulators.
The Giants aim to enable card-less concession sales this year, and
its chief business development officer, Jason Pearl, is enthusiastic
about Clear's technology. "I don't think anyone else comes close."
(Reporting by Paresh Dave; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Bill
Berkrot)
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