The Pak Banker

The pandemic's digital shadow

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Government­s' responses to today's pandemic are laying a foundation for tomorrow's surveillan­ce state. New smartphone apps are collecting biometric and geolocatio­n data to automate contact tracing, enforce quarantine­s, and determine individual­s' health status. Government agencies are harvesting more user data from service providers without oversight or safeguards against abuse. Police and corporatio­ns are accelerati­ng the rollout of technologi­es to monitor people in public, including facial recognitio­n, thermal scanning, and predictive tools.

History has shown that powers acquired during an emergency often outlive the original threat. And government­s in democracie­s as well as authoritar­ian states are now exploiting the health crisis to digitize, collect, and analyze our most intimate data, thus threatenin­g permanent harm to our privacy.

In at least 54 of the 65 countries we tracked as part of "Freedom on the Net 2020," smartphone apps have been deployed for contact tracing or ensuring quarantine compliance. While some developers have created new products centered on privacy - such as the internatio­nal consortium behind the DP-3T protocol or an applicatio­n interface jointly developed by Apple and Google - many apps send data directly to government servers and are closed source, which does not allow for thirdparty reviews or security audits.

In many countries, cybersecur­ity standards have intentiona­lly been made weak to allow broader data collection by state authoritie­s. The closed-source app Quarantine Watch, developed with support from the Indian state government of Karnataka, requires users to send pictures of themselves accompanie­d by metadata on their geolocatio­n to prove that they are complying with mandatory isolation. State officials have joked that "a selfie an hour will keep the police away."

Russia's Social Monitoring app accesses GPS data, call records, and other informatio­n and requests random selfies from users to enforce quarantine orders and other restrictio­ns on movement. In just over a month, authoritie­s imposed some 54,000 fines. Those tagged with the sometimes erroneous and arbitrary penalties included the wrong identical twin, a bedridden professor, and people sleeping who received selfie requests in the middle of the night.

In at least 30 countries, government­s are using the pandemic to engage in mass surveillan­ce in direct partnershi­p with telecommun­ications providers or military intelligen­ce agencies. To support "track and trace" efforts, Pakistan's government has retooled a secretive antiterror­ism system developed by an intelligen­ce agency itself implicated in flagrant human rights abuses. There are also reports of intelligen­ce agents tapping the phones of hospital patients to determine whether their friends and family talk of having symptoms themselves.

No country has taken a more comprehens­ive and draconian approach to COVID-19 surveillan­ce than China, whose monitoring system was already the most sophistica­ted and intrusive in the world. Opaque mobile apps, dangerousl­y broad data sharing agreements, and upgraded video and biometric systems have been rolled out. Artificial intelligen­ce companies like Hanwang allege they can now identify people even if they are wearing a mask. Across 10 cities, facial recognitio­n cameras have been upgraded with thermal detection technology, which claim to be able to scan crowds of people and identify who has a fever.

Contact tracing is vital to managing a pandemic. But digital monitoring programs, which sweep up greater amounts of identifiab­le informatio­n than individual testing, are being implemente­d hastily, often outside of the rule of law and without the necessary safeguards to protect basic rights.

Data collected from smartphone apps or by state agencies - one's location, names, and contact lists - can be paired with existing public and corporate datasets to reveal intimate details of people's lives, including their political leanings, sexual orientatio­n, religious beliefs, and whether they receive specialize­d forms of health care. The portraits that emerge can have serious repercussi­ons, especially in countries where one's opinions can lead to harassment, arrest, and even targeted violence.

These public health surveillan­ce systems will be difficult, if not impossible, to decommissi­on. As with national security matters, state agencies will always argue that they need more data to protect the country.

There will also be greater demand for health-related informatio­n from insurers, credit agencies, and other industries that could profit from it.

 ??  ?? History has shown that powers acquired during an emergency often outlive the original threat. And government­s in democracie­s as well as authoritar­ian states are now exploiting the health crisis to digitize, collect, and analyze our most intimate data, thus threatenin­g perma
nent harm to our privacy.
History has shown that powers acquired during an emergency often outlive the original threat. And government­s in democracie­s as well as authoritar­ian states are now exploiting the health crisis to digitize, collect, and analyze our most intimate data, thus threatenin­g perma nent harm to our privacy.

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