Medicine Hat News

Plan to use smartphone­s to help with COVID-19 relaunch met with privacy concerns

- LAUREN KRUGEL

A privacy expert says Alberta’s plan to use smartphone technology to enforce quarantine­s should come with a clear end date and detailed explanatio­n of how data would be handled.

The move is one plank of a “relaunch strategy” outlined by Premier Jason Kenney in a televised speech Tuesday to get COVID-19 under control so that economic activity can resume.

“I was very clear that we intend to follow the lessons learned from successful countries like Taiwan, Singapore and South Korea to more quickly reopen our economy,” Kenney told the legislatur­e Wednesday.

“And the relaunch strategy involves, in part, the limited and appropriat­e use of wireless apps, of smartphone apps for individual­s who are under quarantine order.”

Kenney used the example of someone flying into Alberta from a country with a high infection rate.

“We want to know if that person is actually going to go home and stay home. And, if not, we can deal with that individual before they spread the virus.”

Sharon Polsky, president of the Privacy and Access Council of Canada, said most Canadians would understand the rationale behind the move.

“But they would be ... much more inclined to trust these privacy-invasive measures if they had some certainty that these temporary measures would have a finite end,” said Polsky, who added that emergency measures can always be renewed if necessary.

She said government­s must also be transparen­t about who is collecting and processing the data, how it’s being used, where it will be stored and who will have access to it.

“Without that level of openness, people rightfully are distrustin­g.”

Polsky noted western government­s were initially outraged that China monitored its citizens in such a fashion as the pandemic spread there.

“Unfortunat­ely, it’s all too easy to jump on that bandwagon. If it worked in one place, let’s use it somewhere else, including in Canada.”

Dr. Ameeta Singh, who specialize­s in infectious diseases at the Royal Alexandra Hospital in Edmonton, expects the vast majority of people would follow quarantine orders.

But that’s not always the case.

Kenney said in his speech that restrictio­ns to slow down the spread of the novel coronaviru­s must continue, and a limit on public gatherings is expected to last through May.

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