I do not know if it’s true for all countries, but at least the USA and the UK require your passport to be signed to be valid. And I know that when I fly, I sometimes get checked if it is signed.

Is there a practical reason for this? Does the signature get checked against anything? Or is it simply that the law says a passport must be signed to be valid, so there you go?

I googled around a bit, but only found resources on how to sign, but not why it needs to be signed.

Thank you Internet hive mind!

  • xePBMg9@lemmynsfw.com
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    3 months ago

    Legacy from a time when it was used as authentication. I guess. I sure find myself not reproducing my past signatures very well. Never got me in to trouble.

    • Hatechildren@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I had my passport renewal denied because the signature on the renewal form didn’t match the old passport. And since I no longer had the old passport to copy the signature style when I resubmitted, I had to throw in a photo copy of my drivers license (that had my signature), use that signature style on the new form, and a letter explaining that the signature on the new form matches something official and is correct.

    • acetanilide@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Banks will sometimes require your signature match the original signature they have on file. I’m guessing it’s not as common anymore with online banking but I know a few years ago I had to sign something a number of times because it wasn’t close enough to the original.

      I thought about it and it might have been around 10 years ago😬