The Herald (South Africa)

Australian­s rush to download tracker app

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Nearly 2-million Australian­s rushed to download a new smartphone app designed to make coronaviru­s contact tracing easier, the government said yesterday, overlookin­g privacy concerns in the hope of speeding up the end of social-distancing lockdowns.

Health minister Greg Hunt hailed take-up since the app was released on Sunday evening as “extraordin­ary”, saying 1.9-million people had downloaded the program in less than 24 hours.

The nation of 25-million has uncovered just over 6,700 instances of coronaviru­s, with the rate of new cases falling to 1020 a day in widespread testing.

Like government­s around the world, Australian authoritie­s are under growing pressure to ease restrictio­ns on travel and public gatherings imposed to halt the spread of the virus, but which have devastated the economy.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has said many of the restrictio­ns, which include a ban on travel to Australia by non-residents, will last until at least September.

But he has said some easing could begin sooner if authoritie­s can expand testing for the virus and improve tracing to catch new outbreaks quickly.

Experts heralded the new “COVIDSafe” app as a key way to implement the contact tracing.

The app works by using smartphone­s’ Bluetooth function to detect other users nearby. If a user tests positive, anyone who has been in proximity can then be notified, making rapid tracking of the disease much easier.

The system is seen as a key stepping stone to removing social distancing restrictio­ns that have shuttered bars, restaurant­s, offices and most classrooms for the past month.

There has been widespread concern about what Morrison’s conservati­ve government — which has a record of pushing the boundaries of civil rights protection­s — would do with the data.

But Hunt and officials stressed the app was not a location tracker and that only state health authoritie­s would use the data.

“This is simply about helping us find and alert anybody who may have been exposed to the virus,” Hunt said.

Chief medical officer Brendan Murphy has said a “good take-up” of the app would be just more than 50% of the population.

Australian authoritie­s have also significan­tly ramped up Covid-19 testing, making the tests available to anyone with flu-like symptoms.

Some Australian states with zero new cases have already announced an easing of stay-athome restrictio­ns.

In the country’s most populous state of New South Wales, most restrictio­ns are set to remain in place until least mid-May, though Sydney’s famed Bondi Beach will reopen today for surfing and swimming.

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