Santa Cruz Sentinel

Here come COVID-19 tracing apps — and privacy trade-offs

- By Matt O’brien and Christina Larson

As government­s around the world consider how to monitor new coronaviru­s outbreaks while reopening their societies, many are starting to bet on smartphone apps to help stanch the pandemic.

But their decisions on which technologi­es to use — and how far those allow authoritie­s to peer into private lives — are highlighti­ng some uncomforta­ble tradeoffs between protecting privacy and public health.

“There are conflictin­g interests,” said Tina White, a Stanford University researcher who first introduced a privacy-protecting approach in February. “Government­s and public health (agencies) want to be able to track people” to minimize the spread of COVID-19, but people are less likely to download a voluntary app if it is intrusive, she said.

Containing infectious disease outbreaks boils down to a simple mantra: test, trace and isolate. Today, that means identifyin­g people who test positive for the novel coronaviru­s, tracking down others they might have infected, and preventing further spread by quarantini­ng everyone who might be contagious.

That second step requires an army of healthcare workers to question coronaviru­s carriers about recent contacts so those people can be tested and potentiall­y isolated.

Smartphone apps could speed up that process by collecting data about your movements and alerting you if you’ve spent time near a confirmed coronaviru­s carrier. The more detailed that data, the more it could help regional government­s identify and contain emerging disease “hot spots.” But data collected by government­s can also be abused by government­s — or their privatesec­tor partners.

Some countries and local government­s are issuing voluntary government- designed apps that make informatio­n directly available to public health authoritie­s.

In Australia, more than 3 million people have downloaded such an app touted by the prime minister, who compared it to the ease of applying sunscreen and said more app downloads would bring about a “more liberated economy and society.” Utah is the first U.S. state to embrace a similar approach, one developed by a social media startup previously focused on helping young people hang out with nearby friends.

Both these apps record a digital trail of the strangers an individual encountere­d. Utah’s goes even further, using a device’s location to help track which restaurant­s or stores a user has visited.

The app is “a tool to help jog the memory of the person who is positive so we can more readily identify where they’ve been, who they’ve been in contact with, if they choose to allow that,” said Angela Dunn, Utah’s state epidemiolo­gist.

A competing approach under developmen­t by tech giants Apple and Google limits the informatio­n collected and anonymizes what it pulls in so that such personaliz­ed tracking isn’t possible.

Apple and Google have pushed for public health agencies to adopt their privacy- oriented model, offering an app-building interface they say will work smoothly on billions of phones when the software rolls out sometime in May. Germany and a growing number of European countries have aligned with that approach, while others, such as France and the UK, have argued for more government access to app data.

Most coronaviru­s-tracking apps rely on Bluetooth, a decades- old short-range wireless technology, to locate other phones nearby that are running the same app.

 ?? LAURENT GILLIERON — KEYSTONE ?? A soldier of the Swiss army holds a smartphone with an app using Decentrali­zed Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing during a test with 100 soldiers in the military compound of Chamblon near Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerlan­d, Thursday.
LAURENT GILLIERON — KEYSTONE A soldier of the Swiss army holds a smartphone with an app using Decentrali­zed Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing during a test with 100 soldiers in the military compound of Chamblon near Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerlan­d, Thursday.

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