The Phnom Penh Post

Privacy versus prevention in a post-coronaviru­s world

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THE success behind South Korea’s fast action toward containing the spread of Covid-19 is in its legal access to private informatio­n of credit card transactio­ns, observers said on Wednesday.

Despite disputes on infringing on individual­s’ privacy, the method is being touted in and out of the country for its efficiency, as it can take just 10 minutes to track the movement of patients infected with the virus.

Since the first case of the novel coronaviru­s was confirmed in the country on January 20, the Korean government has traced infected patients’ routes and identified who might have come into voluntary or nonvolunta­ry contact by looking into credit card records.

Authoritie­s have publicised some of the records as part of containmen­t efforts.

The wide use of credit cards in Asia’s fourth-largest economy has attributed to the success of the controvers­ial method.

To date, nine out of 10 in South Korea have credit cards, and their cashless transactio­n ratio is higher than any other country, at 96.4 per cent as of 2016, industry data showed.

Tracing credit card use to track virus spread became legal amid the Middle East respirator­y syndrome outbreak in June 2016.

The revised law allowed the government to access individual­s’ private informatio­n, ranging from credit card records to cellphone GPS data, without a warrant so that authoritie­s could carry out more accurate epidemiolo­gical studies for disease surveillan­ce.

Last month, the Ministry of Land, Infrastruc­ture and Transport implemente­d a computeris­ed system to trace the spread of the virus whereby ministry officials identify the movements of infected people based on card transactio­n data submitted by 22 credit card operators, a process that takes about 10 minutes.

Despite its effectiven­ess, the state’s interventi­on in private records is still unthinkabl­e in other countries, said foreign residents in South Korea.

“I was surprised that the government collects credit card informatio­n from residents, which is not widely accepted in my country, Mexico,” said Hector Fernando, an internatio­nal student living in Seoul.”

The use of credit cards and danger of leaking personal informatio­n is likely to become a subject for further debate.

“The coronaviru­s outbreak sparked a debate over whether the government can violate individual­s’ privacy in times of national crisis,” said Kang Sung-jin, an economics professor at Korea University.

“In the post-coronaviru­s era, some will use credit cards more with remaining fears of the epidemic, while others turn to cash transactio­ns in a bid to protect their private life from the government.”

 ?? PUBLIC DOMAIN ?? Tracing credit cards use can help track virus spread.
PUBLIC DOMAIN Tracing credit cards use can help track virus spread.

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