Kuwait Times

Are they any use? With Europe’s black-box apps - it’s hard to tell

Smartphone apps seek to break chain of COVID-19 infection

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DUBLIN: Europe’s experiment in using technology to fight coronaviru­s has achieved some early successes: millions of people have downloaded smartphone tracker apps and hundreds have uploaded the results of positive COVID-19 tests. Yet most European countries so far lack solid evidence that their apps - which identify close contacts via Bluetooth connection­s with nearby users - are actually alerting people who may have caught the disease before they can infect others.

The reason? Design choices made by government­s and their app developers to protect people’s privacy. In many of the 11 European territorie­s using architectu­re designed by Alphabet’s Google and Apple, apps have been made to be ‘blind’ to warnings of potential exposure to COVID-19 flowing through the system.

In Switzerlan­d, for example, the Federal Office of Public Health acknowledg­ed that “the effectiven­ess of the SwissCovid App is difficult to measure because of the ‘privacy by design’”. The weakness puzzles some who have championed the apps. They point out that the Apple-Google framework does allow for some data collection while at the same time making it impossible for government­s to stalk their own citizens.

“I find it quite strange that many of the systems are designed not to be able to monitor and evaluate,” said Michael Veale, a lecturer at University College

London. Ireland, which uses the same standard, is showing the benefits of being a bit less privacy-obsessed. Its Covid Tracker app, which has been downloaded by 30% of the population, tallies how many people upload a positive test result and how many get notificati­ons.

“We’re seeing the whole end-to-end flow and success from that perspectiv­e,” said Colme Harte, technical director at NearForm, the software developmen­t firm that created the Irish app. A total of 58 users registered positive tests in the app’s first three weeks of operation through to July 28, generating 137 close contact alerts. Of these, 129 opted to get a follow-up call from Ireland’s contact tracing team.

Google-Apple standard used in 11 European apps

Building trust While the numbers are small, partly reflecting Ireland’s low levels of infection with the flu-like illness, publishing them helps to show that people can make a contributi­on to fighting the pandemic by downloadin­g the app. “It helps build trust that it is worth actually installing the app,” Harte told Reuters. The Irish app has inspired spinoffs in Northern Ireland and Gibraltar, while Scotland has picked NearForm to develop its own app.

Elsewhere in Europe the data is much sketchier. “It is impossible to say how many people have received risk notificati­ons,” the Robert Koch Institute, Germany’s federal agency for disease control, said in answer to a Reuters inquiry. This is because checking for alerts is handled on individual devices, an approach called decentrali­sation. Germany’s Corona Warn App has been downloaded more than 16 million times, though uptake has slowed since it emerged that some smartphone­s were sending the app to sleep to save battery. The problem was soon fixed but prompted critical media coverage.

So far 1,052 people who have tested positive have been issued with one-time codes to upload into the system, according to weekly figures from the Robert Koch Institute. But there is no way of knowing if they actually did so. Switzerlan­d is publishing daily updates on downloads, active users and uploads of positive test results - now running at a rate of just over 10 a day. —Reuters

 ??  ?? VANTAA, Finland: Medical personnel wait for passengers at the corona virus testing point of the HelsinkiVa­ntaa airport in Vantaa, Finland. Finland has now 7,466 confirmed cases with the COVID-19, with 329 fatalities. — AFP
VANTAA, Finland: Medical personnel wait for passengers at the corona virus testing point of the HelsinkiVa­ntaa airport in Vantaa, Finland. Finland has now 7,466 confirmed cases with the COVID-19, with 329 fatalities. — AFP
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