Los Angeles Times

Singapore’s new take on tracing app data

COVID- 19 program could be used for criminal inquiries, the government now says.

- By David Pierson

SINGAPORE — Singapore’s COVID- 19 contact-tracing program is facing renewed concerns over privacy after a government minister told lawmakers that data collected through the program could be used for criminal investigat­ions, despite earlier assurances to the contrary.

The Trace Together program, which requires Singaporea­ns to download an app or carry a Bluetooth- enabled token, was introduced in March. Although participat­ion is technicall­y voluntary, officials have threatened social penalties for those who do not sign up. So far, more than 4.2 million people, or about three- quarters of residents, have joined the program.

The government had initially pledged that none of the data collected would be accessed unless an individual was found to have contracted the coronaviru­s and required contact tracing.

But in a session of Parliament on Monday, Minister of State for Home Affairs Desmond Tan said the data could also be used in criminal inquiries.

“Singapore Police Force is empowered under the criminal procedure code to obtain any data, and that includes the Trace Together data for criminal investigat­ions,” Tan said. “The government is the custodian of the [ Trace Together] data admitted by the individual­s, and stringent measures are put in place to safeguard this personal data.”

The Trace Together website was updated later Monday to reflect the addition of criminal investigat­ions to the potential uses of the program’s data.

The revelation comes after months of public reassuranc­es that the app and token would not be intrusive and pleas for trust in adopting the program.

On Tuesday, Singapore’s foreign minister and head of its national technology initiative, Vivian Balakrishn­an, told Parliament in an unschedule­d statement that he had “not thought” to mention law- enforcemen­t access to the program’s data, under Singapore’s Criminal Procedure Code, when he touted Trace Together’s privacy features last year.

“Frankly, I had not thought of the CPC when I spoke earlier,” Balakrishn­an said, adding that other sensitive data such as phone and banking records are also subject to criminal investigat­ions. “I think Singaporea­ns can understand why the [ CPC] confers such broad powers. There may be serious crimes — murder, terrorist incidents — where the use of Trace Together data in police investigat­ions may be necessary in the public interest.”

Government­s worldwide are grappling with effective contact tracing, including the United States, where cooperatio­n with the public has been undermined by misinforma­tion and mistrust, and China, where contact tracing is suspected of enhancing the authoritar­ian government’s mass- surveillan­ce tools.

Singapore, an island nation of 5.7 million, has whittled down the number of active cases to less than 200 as of Monday after hundreds of people were being infected daily in cramped worker dormitorie­s earlier in the pandemic. There have been a total of 29 deaths from the disease in the country, which has exhibited more signs of a return to normal life, such as in- person schooling and crowded restaurant­s and malls.

Singaporea­ns were initially skittish about TraceToget­her, which uses Bluetooth to track users rather than GPS. An online petition calling for an end to the program over privacy concerns has attracted nearly 55,000 signatures.

Though it is voluntary, adoption of Trace Together surged in recent months after the government announced that it would not loosen social restrictio­ns until 70% of residents had downloaded the app or obtained a token. The government also said the app or token would be required to enter public venues later this year.

Tan said Monday that Trace Together data needed for criminal investigat­ions could be accessed only by “authorized officers” and that any misuse of the informatio­n could result in a $ 3,800 f ine and/ or up to two years in prison.

That did not prevent a backlash to the news. One tweet suggested Singaporea­ns toss their Trace Together tokens in the trash.

Jolovan Wham, an activist who was arrested in November when he held up a smiley- face sign in public in a one- man protest, admonished the government on Twitter for going back on its word. He said he “sure as hell” would not download the Trace Together app.

Any enhanced tools for authoritie­s sets off alarms for rights advocates. Ruled by one party since independen­ce in 1965, Singapore has little tolerance for criticism. It also has an abundance of laws that are enforced with the aid of closed- circuit cameras throughout the city.

“Singapore’s betrayal of its solemn promises to limit use of Trace Together informatio­n to public health matters exposes how the government has been covertly exploiting the pandemic to deepen its surveillan­ce and control over the population, and undermine the right to privacy,” Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, said in a statement.

“The government owes its people an apology for making false assurances and should protect the right to privacy by immediatel­y firewallin­g the data collected from the app away from the police, prosecutor­s and other law enforcemen­t personnel.”

 ?? Catherine Lai AFP/ Getty I mages ?? SINGAPORE’S TraceToget­her program, which requires residents to download an app or carry a Bluetooth- enabled token, has prompted privacy concerns.
Catherine Lai AFP/ Getty I mages SINGAPORE’S TraceToget­her program, which requires residents to download an app or carry a Bluetooth- enabled token, has prompted privacy concerns.

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