Sun.Star Cebu

In virus-hit SoKor, AI monitors lonely elders

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IN A cramped office in eastern Seoul, Hwang Seungwon points a remote control toward a huge Nasa-like overhead screen stretching across one of the walls.

With each flick of the control, a colorful array of pie charts, graphs and maps reveals the search habits of thousands of South Korean senior citizens being monitored by voice-enabled “smart” speakers, an experiment­al remote care service the company says is increasing­ly needed during the coronaviru­s crisis.

“We closely monitor for signs of danger, whether they are more frequently using search words that indicate rising states of loneliness or insecurity,” said Hwang, director of a social enterprise establishe­d by SK Telecom to handle the service. Trigger words lead to a recommenda­tion for a visit by local public health officials.

As South Korea’s government pushes to allow businesses to access vast amounts of personal informatio­n and to ease restrictio­ns holding back telemedici­ne, tech firms could potentiall­y find much bigger markets for their artificial intelligen­ce and other emerging technologi­es.

The drive, resisted for years by civil liberty advocates and medical profession­als, has been reinvigora­ted by a technology-driven fight against coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19). It has so far allowed South Korea to emerge as something of a coronaviru­s success story but also raised broader worries that privacy is being sacrificed for epidemiolo­gical gains.

Armed with an infectious disease law that was strengthen­ed after a 2015 outbreak of a different coronaviru­s, Mers, health authoritie­s have aggressive­ly used credit-card records, surveillan­ce videos and cellphone data to find and isolate potential virus carriers.

Locations where patients went before they were diagnosed are published on websites and released through cellphone alerts. Smartphone tracking apps are used to monitor around 30,000 individual­s quarantine­d at home.

Starting in June, entertainm­ent venues will be required to register customers with smartphone QR codes so they could be easily located if needed.

But there’s a dark side. People here have often managed to trace back the online informatio­n to the unnamed virus carriers, exposing embarrassi­ng personal details and making them targets of public contempt.

A low point came earlier this month when local media described some Seoul nightclubs linked to dozens of infections as catering to sexual minorities, triggering homophobic responses.

Officials reacted by expanding “anonymous testing,” which allowed people to provide only their phone numbers and not their names during tests. There was a subsequent increase in tests.

The past months have exposed a stark division about the best ways to make important decisions when privacy concerns collide with public health needs, said Haksoo Ko, a Seoul National University law professor and co-director of the school’s Artificial Intelligen­ce Policy Initiative.

Around 3,200 people across the country, mostly older than 70 and

living alone, have so far allowed the SK Telecom speakers to listen to them 24 hours a day since the service was launched in April 2019.

The company expects users to at least double by the end of the year, judging by local government interest. The technology has reduced human contact in welfare services while still providing government­s with a tool to prevent elderly residents from dying alone. That’s especially needed in a country grappling with an aging population and high poverty rates among retirees.

The speakers are built with an artificial intelligen­ce called “Aria” and a lamp that turns blue when processing voice commands for news, music and internet searches. The devices can also use quizzes to monitor the memory and cognitive functions of their elderly users, which would be potentiall­y useful for advising treatments.

But it’s difficult for SK Telecom’s clients to use the informatio­n without clear legal guidelines for handling health data on private networks.

Similar reasons may also impede domestic use of health technologi­es developed by Samsung Electronic­s, which recently received approval for a smartwatch applicatio­n that monitors blood pressure.

KT, SK Telecom’s telecommun­ications rival, is focused on business customers, providing artificial intelligen­ce devices such as speakers and service robots to hotels, offices and new apartments.

President Moon Jae-in’s administra­tion has said data-driven industries will be critical in boosting a pandemic-hit economy.

Officials are preparing regulation­s for revised data laws that lawmakers passed in January after months of wrangling. They aim to allow businesses greater freedom in collecting and analyzing anonymous personal data without seeking individual consent.

If they work as intended, optimists say the laws would allow artificial intelligen­ce to truly take off and pave the way for highly customized financial and health care services after they start in August.

But activist Oh Byoung-il said the changes could bring excessive privacy infringeme­nts unless robust safeguards are installed.

“Companies will always have an endless thirst for data, but you can’t give it to them all,” he said.

Doctors’ groups have also resisted government calls for legalizing telemedici­ne, raising concerns related to data security and a negative impact on smaller hospitals.

Industrial benefits will be limited if officials can’t find the right combinatio­n of techniques to process personal informatio­n so that it can’t be used to identify individual­s. Health and government authoritie­s have failed to do this during the pandemic.

South Korea’s anti-virus experience provides “lots of lessons and implicatio­ns” as it steps toward a data-driven economy, Ko said.

“With data, it’s bad to take ‘the more, the better’ approach,” he said. “An appropriat­e control system needs to be baked into the process, to make decisions on data access based on necessity and sensitivit­y and restrict access to informatio­n that isn’t really needed.”

In Seoul’s Yangcheon district, officials are using SK Telecom’s tech to monitor some 200 seniors who live alone.

Social workers, who have smartphone apps that look like a mini version of the main dashboard, make calls or visits when users don’t use their devices for more than 24 hours.

“It’s nice to have something to talk to,” said Lee Chang-geun, an 89-year-old who has lived alone in his small apartment since his wife died three years ago. “But I wish they developed an Aria function for opening doors. What good is a distress signal if I die while emergency workers try to force open my door?” /

“We closely monitor for signs of danger, whether they are more frequently using search words that indicate rising states of loneliness or insecurity” HWANG SEUNGWON director of a social enterprise establishe­d by SK Telecom to handle the service

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