by Beata Paragi, Corvinus University of Budapest
Paragi, B. (2026). Digital passing: “I died once, so I could live. Perhaps that is my real story”. Big Data & Society, 13(2).
Cover stories can save lives. In her recently published “Digital passing: “I died once, so I could live. Perhaps that is my real story,” Beata Paragi approaches digital identity fraud from the perspective of vulnerable individuals accused of committing identity fraud as a criminal offence. Inspired by literary works and using insights from Holocaust-studies, this paper recalls the matter of identity performance during the Holocaust – known as passing with assumed identities – and conceptualizes digital passing by exploring similarities and differences regarding imagination, resistance and survival.
Persecuted Jews and Roma could survive the Holocaust and Porajmos by passing – assuming others’ identities, hiding and/or preserving anonymity – a desperate strategy that not only relied on past practices, but is also echoed by contemporary stories. Today’s migrants whose citizenship does not guarantee the adequate level of legal protection often have to make similar choices to escape violence, abuse, hunger or early death.
The places where people find 'refuge' – crowded refugee camps, detention centres, and border regions from the Mediterranean to Australia – are often brutal, the inhuman conditions of which are documented by Forensic Architecture and Border Forensics, among others. As a result, millions trapped between entry denial at the border and danger at home are expected to prove persecution they may not be able to document, not least to narrate for the very nature of any trauma. They are not necessarily persecuted by law, nor do they wear visible markers like the yellow stars, but diverse digital and biometric technologies can reveal, verify, or even infer origins from biometric data, making origin and anonymity harder to preserve, and making the 'narrating self' redundant for decisions on eligibility.
At normative level everyone should enjoy human rights protection, but in practice citizenship (or its very lack) can block not only safe travel but the very chance to a life without the risk of premature death. The tension between lived experiences and human subjectivities on the one hand and obsession with tech-accelerated identification on the other hand sits at the heart of several urgent conversations today, such as data justice, critical criminology, autonomy of migration, and the technologies of migration and border control. The conceptualisation of digital passing helps us see how human lives become disposable/worthless as a result of beliefs in security, financial incentives and tech-solutionism and how survival strategies are adapted to the digital/biometric conditions.