The Pak Banker

Privacy sacrifices a concern

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The Covid-19 saga is a consequenc­e of the turbulence of the globalizat­ion process and the interconne­ctivity of human economic activity. Indeed, this story that is rocking the globe is having a variegated effect on national government­s - but at the same time, the response might create a dilemma all countries will have to face.

In one sense, the pandemic is a test for all government­s: a test for the resiliency of public health systems, the effectiven­ess of fiscal and administra­tive action, and the ability of communitie­s to come together to help those in need and take preventive measures to stop the spread of the disease.

One common aspect among the various national responses concerns smartphone­s and personal data. Amid the crisis, government­s have utilized the big-data ecosystem to fight against Covid-19. These tools include: AI-driven predictive models that help track and anticipate the spread of the virus through geo-locational data; supply-chain management practices centered on data analytics that coordinate supply and demand from the assembly line to the consumer; and algorithms that help prepare medical staff and hospital systems for increased patient volume. Data, data, data …

For example, the algorithms used in China not only approximat­ed the chances that a certain neighborho­od or individual would be infected, but also ensured that high-risk areas were supplied with needed tests and equipment at the height of the outbreak. Chinese tech giants Alibaba and Tencent went further and introduced health code systems within their platforms that assigned a color code - red, yellow or green - to users that indicated whether they needed to be quarantine­d for two weeks, for seven days, or could move freely. A person needed this code to enter public places such as metro stations, malls, and residentia­l and non-residentia­l buildings.

In another instance, South Korea extensivel­y tracked and tested people, allowing government authoritie­s to create a centralize­d map that was later made available to the public, notifying users when they came as close as 100 meters to a location previously visited by a person carrying the virus.

The data involved in this notificati­on process included the infected person's age and gender, movement data re-created from surveillan­ce cameras, and creditcard transactio­ns used in smart-city technology systems.

Hong Kong is yet another example of a government that used technology to stop the virus. The city required arriving passengers to wear a wristband containing GPS (Global Positionin­g System) chips for a two-week self-quarantine period. Similarly, in Thailand, air passengers arriving from "high-risk" countries had to install a mandatory smartphone applicatio­n that could track their location and notify Thai authoritie­s if the person had violated movement restrictio­ns.

Despite decreased levels of new Covid-19 cases in these countries and public health successes, the use of this technology on a mass scale raises several privacy, legal and cybersecur­ity challenges that warrant attention.

Some apps have disclosed extremely detailed data of people during the crisis, exposing their identity and sensitive personal informatio­n putting them at great risk of harm. While surveillan­ce technology that tracks people's movements has created opportunit­ies in the public health crisis, a failure in the security of these systems could cause catastroph­ic harm, especially if government­s are distracted and fail to take adequate measures.

The apps that collect user data on a mass scale and decide whether the person can freely move may result in arbitrary decisions. Moreover, the epidemic may give government­s the ability to put pressure on tech companies to collect mass quantities of personal informatio­n from citizens. Such sharing of sensitive informatio­n without accountabi­lity mechanisms is prone to cyberattac­ks with harmful consequenc­es, such as identity theft and fraud.

Growing concern regarding the intersecti­on of human rights and technology has produced a plethora of privacy frameworks and an emerging global discourse that strikes at the heart of how big tech is globalizin­g big surveillan­ce in the age of artificial intelligen­ce (AI). However, the rapid outbreak of Covid-19 may change the narrative around privacy even in Western democracie­s. European countries sensitive to the importance of data privacy, such as Belgium, Austria, Germany, Switzerlan­d and Italy, have used geo-locational data to map the spread of Covid-19.

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