Imperial Valley Press

Apple, Google release technology for pandemic apps

- BY MATT O’BRIEN AP Technology Writer

Apple and Google on Wednesday released long-awaited smartphone technology to automatica­lly notify people if they might have been exposed to the coronaviru­s.

The companies said 22 countries and several U.S. states are already planning to build voluntary phone apps using their software. It relies on Bluetooth wireless technology to detect when someone who downloaded the app has spent time near another app user who later tests positive for the virus.

Many government­s have already tried, mostly unsuccessf­ully, to roll out their own phone apps to fight the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic. Many of those apps have encountere­d technical problems on Apple and Android phones and haven’t been widely adopted. They often use GPS to track people’s location, which Apple and Google are banning from their new tool because of privacy and accuracy concerns.

Public health agencies from Germany to the states of Alabama and South Carolina have been waiting to use the Apple-Google model, while other government­s have said the tech giants’ privacy restrictio­ns will be a hindrance because public health workers will have no access to the data.

The companies said they’re not trying to replace contact tracing, a pillar of infection control that involves trained public health workers reaching out to people who may have been exposed to an infected person. But they said their automatic “exposure notificati­on” system can augment that process and slow the spread of COVID-19 by virus carriers who are interactin­g with strangers and aren’t yet showing symptoms.

The identity of app users will be protected by encryption and anonymous identifier beacons that change frequently.

“User adoption is key to success and we believe that these strong privacy protection­s are also the best way to encourage use of these apps,” the companies said in a joint statement Wednesday.

The companies said the new technology — the product of a rare partnershi­p between the rival tech giants — solves some of the main technical challenges that government­s have had in building Bluetooth-based apps. It will make it easier for iPhones and Android phones to detect each other, work across national and regional borders and fix some of the problems that led previous apps to quickly drain a phone’s battery.

Some privacy advocates have favored the Google-Apple approach because it offers more privacy and security. But others, including Ryan Calo, a law professor who co-directs the University of Washington’s Tech Policy Lab, said he is concerned about its effectiven­ess if people get too many false alerts asking them to quarantine themselves. He said public health agencies would be better off being able to track location with careful safeguards.

Calo said Google and Apple have been more upfront about the limitation­s of their model, but he said he’s still worried some government­s will treat it as a substitute for crucial investment­s in free, widespread testing and hiring an army of human contact tracers.

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