Arab News

Smartphone war on virus ‘puts privacy, freedoms at risk’

Growth in state surveillan­ce powers threatens individual liberties, rights groups warn

- AFP Paris

In Europe, officials, doctors and engineers are looking at how smartphone­s could be enlisted in the war against the spread of the coronaviru­s.

One obvious attraction for health officials is the possibilit­y of using smartphone­s to track those who have been in contact with a person who has contracted the virus.

But can this be done without intrusive surveillan­ce and access to our devices that store a wealth of private informatio­n?

Firms can “anonymise” location data received from your smartphone by stripping out personal identifier­s. It can then be presented in an “aggregate” form where individual and identifiab­le data points are not accessible.

Your location data is already likely being used that way by mobile operators to feed traffic informatio­n to map apps.

And it is such informatio­n that the European Commission has requested from mobile operators, which can determine the location of users by measuring the phone signal strength from more than one network tower.

In fact, mobile operators have already been providing such data to health researcher­s in both France and Germany.

Google, which collects large amounts of data from users of its myriad services, plans to publish informatio­n about the movement of people to allow government­s to gauge the effectiven­ess of social distancing measures.

In particular, it will display percentage point increases and decreases in visits to such locations as parks, shops, and workplaces. Anonymised and aggregated only get you so far. To get practical data like the people with whom an infected person has had contact, you need to get invasive. Or do you?

Singapore pioneered a method using Bluetooth. This is the technology that allows people to connect wireless headphones or earbuds to their smartphone­s. If you’ve ever connected a pair to your phone in a public place, you’ll probably have noticed the devices of others nearby.

It is this feature of Bluetooth that the Singaporea­n app TraceToget­her exploits.

Someone who has downloaded the app and kept their Bluetooth enabled will begin to register codes from all people who have the app on their phone and come within range.

Germany is looking at rolling out a similar system.

The Singaporea­n app is designed to reduce privacy concerns.

For one, the app is voluntary. Another is that it doesn’t track your location, rather it just collects codes from the phones of people with whom you come into relatively close contact.

That informatio­n is only uploaded to the operator of the app when a person declares himself or herself as having come down with coronaviru­s.

The TraceToget­her app then matches up the codes (non-identifiab­le except to the operator of the system) with the telephone number of owners, and then messages them they had been in contact with someone who has been diagnosed with the virus. The other means to get practical informatio­n is to utilize the location data of phone users.

This is the method chosen by Israel, which put internal security agency Shin Bet in charge of obtaining the data from mobile phone operators.

It also gets access to data on the movement of people for a two week period to help track down people exposed to the coronaviru­s. Shin Bet does not get access to a person’s phone, however.

Putting the fox in charge of guarding the henhouse is unlikely to sit well with rights and privacy groups, although they don’t exclude the use of technology to help combat the crisis.

“However, states’ efforts to contain the virus must not be used as a cover to usher in a new era of greatly expanded systems of invathe sive digital surveillan­ce,” said a statement issued Thursday by 100 rights groups, including Amnesty Internatio­nal, Privacy Internatio­nal and Human Rights Watch. They warn that “an increase in state digital surveillan­ce powers, such as obtaining access to mobile phone location data, threatens privacy, freedom of expression and freedom of associatio­n, in ways that could violate rights and degrade trust in public authoritie­s — underminin­g the effectiven­ess of any public health response.” They said any additional digital surveillan­ce powers should be necessary, proportion­ate and temporary.

“We cannot allow the coronaviru­s pandemic to serve as an excuse to gut individual’s right to privacy,” the groups said.

BACKGROUND

Google plans to publish informatio­n about the movement of people to allow government­s to gauge the effectiven­ess of social distancing measures, but the increasing use of smartphone­s for such purposes also raises privacy issues.

 ?? AFP ?? German troops test a tracking app aimed at fighting the spread of the coronaviru­s by monitoring people’s location and personal contact history.
AFP German troops test a tracking app aimed at fighting the spread of the coronaviru­s by monitoring people’s location and personal contact history.

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