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Proposed health code app sparks anger in China

- AFP Beijing

A Chinese local government’s proposal for a post-coronaviru­s health app that ranks citizens based on their smoking, drinking, exercise and sleep habits has sparked fury online over privacy concerns

China has already developed apps that indicate an individual’s likelihood of contractin­g coronaviru­s based on their travel history and whether they had come into contact with an infected case. Hangzhou, a high-tech hub and home to e-commerce giant Alibaba, was among the first Chinese cities to adopt such an app, which gives people a green, yellow or red code that determines if they can buy travel tickets or enter public places.

But the health commission in the eastern city of 10 million people is now considerin­g rolling out an app that looks much deeper into the health of citizens.

The software monitors users in real-time and ranks them on a 100-point “health gradient” scale, according to a post on the commission’s website.

According to shots of the app shared in the post, it ranks citizens out of the entire population of Hangzhou based on their health score, which changes according to the user’s daily actions.

The app can also give companies and residentia­l communitie­s an overall health score based on the scores of individual­s, such as employees’ average sleep rate, steps taken and how many of them suffer from chronic disease, according to a screenshot. Currently in developmen­t, the app could be completed as early as June, but further details — such as how data is collected — remain unclear.

“The municipal health commission should grasp the opportunit­y to deepen the use of health codes... to ensure the full completion of various municipal health systems,” health commission member Sun Yongrong was quoted as saying. Big data-powered health apps developed by local government­s in collaborat­ion with internet firms Alibaba and Tencent have become part of the fabric of life in postcorona­virus China.

The apps, which differ by region and are often hosted on the ubiquitous mobile payment platforms AliPay and WeChat Pay, typically collect user location data, transport routes and ID informatio­n. Chinese tech commentato­r and privacy advocate Lawrence Li said that the new app should ideally be an opt-in system to protect citizens’ rights.

“In the case of COVID (data collection) I think people willingly participat­ed, but it’s another story if the government wants to make it the ‘new normal’,” he told AFP.

The proposal, which was posted online last week, stoked major discussion­s on the Twitterlik­e social network Weibo and question-and-answer forum Zhihu over the weekend.

“What the hell do my smoking, drinking and sleeping habits have to do with you?” read one comment on Weibo.

“We have no privacy left whatsoever,” lamented another user.

Mass government collection of data for epidemic-fighting purposes has sparked widespread concerns over data privacy and security.

Last month, police in Shanxi province announced that the personal informatio­n of over 6,000 people who entered a local hospital had been leaked on WeChat.

Baidu chief executive Robin Li last week proposed legislatio­n that would allow people to withdraw personal informatio­n collected during the epidemic and establish guidelines for data storage during “special periods.”

BACKGROUND

Big data-powered health apps developed by local government­s in collaborat­ion with internet firms Alibaba and Tencent have become part of the fabric of life in post-coronaviru­s China.

 ?? AFP ?? A man pulls a cart filled with collected recyclable goods in China, where an app that will track and rank citizens through their lifestyle choices has been criticized for breaching privacy.
AFP A man pulls a cart filled with collected recyclable goods in China, where an app that will track and rank citizens through their lifestyle choices has been criticized for breaching privacy.

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