Weekend Herald

App salutely

$6.4m to track Covid — not a bad deal

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Spending on the NZ Covid Tracer app reached $6.4 million by the end of last year, says the Ministry of Health. The Herald first revealed that Auckland app developer Rush Digital was the ministry’s developmen­t partner for the tracer.

Rush chief executive Pavan Vyas said his company had up to 15 staff working on the app at any one time.

The NZ Covid Tracer was first released on May 20. Its launch was marked by confusion, as people tried to use it to scan posters for various private efforts to create a contacttra­cing system, some of which had been in the market since March.

It was not until August 19 that it was made compulsory for businesses to display an official QR code poster compatible with the ministry’s official NZ Covid Tracer app.

On December 9, the NZ Covid Tracer received a key upgrade as users got the choice to enable an automated Bluetooth tracking system created by Apple and Google — recording those you have been in close contact with (if they have the same feature enabled), while QR code posters record where you’ve been.

As of last Tuesday — the most recent day for which the ministry has released data — the NZ Covid Tracer had been registered on 2.56 million phones.

Poster scanning is a manual process, and the number of people who bother to take their phone out of their pocket and snap a QR code fluctuates with the news cycle. Last Tuesday 467,891 people scanned at least one poster.

Bluetooth tracking, however, is automated. Once you enable the feature, it will keep recording your close contacts until you switch it off, so its user numbers grow by thousands each day. As of Tuesday, 924,662 people had Bluetooth enabled.

Just under one million using Bluetooth is a significan­t number, but Dr Andrew Chen, a researcher with Auckland University’s Koi Tu¯: The Centre for Informed Futures, says we’ll need “at least two million people participat­ing to have more confidence that this data will be useful in the unfortunat­e event of a further outbreak in New Zealand.” So, for our $6.4m, we’ve got half-way there. Further than most countries.

But did the Government get value for its money?

“Overall, I think it’s pretty good value for money as far as government IT goes, and is significan­tly cheaper than some of the costs seen in other jurisdicti­ons,” Chen told his Twitter followers.

NZRise co-founder Don Christie said from the limited informatio­n provided by the ministry, it appeared that the core costs of developing the NZ Covid Tracer were $2.77m, which he described as “reasonable value”, assuming that beyond the smartphone app itself, back-end work was also required so it could integrate with other systems used by the ministry.

Tech commentato­r Paul Brislen said, “I think the $6.4m budget sounds about right for a project of this scale and importance.

“Certainly, it could have been done more cheaply but we have to remember that at the time we were very much flying blind with no real idea of how this would pan out.

“Building a basic app and constant upgrades as advances enabled new features was absolutely the way to go, and the end result is a classic Kiwi tale of producing a better app on time and dramatical­ly under the budget of some others around the world. The app saves lives every day. I think it’s a bargain.”

Cost in other countries

The biggest blowout could well be in the UK, where the National Health Service last September revealed some £10.8m ($19.4m) was spent on its original stab at an app, which was abandoned in June, and £25m was budgeted for a replacemen­t app that launched on September 24 (with NZ’s Rush Digital consulting on its QR code scanning element).

The UK’s total contact tracing app spending is expected to top £40m. The UK has at least got a tangible result for its spend-up, with an Oxford University study finding it prevented 600,000 Covid infections as 1.7m alerts were sent to its 21m users as of the end of December.

Germany’s contact tracing app cost €20m ($31.7m), according to AP.

Australia had allocated A$4.8m ($4.9m) to private partners working on its COVIDSafe app as of September, plus around A$5m spent on operationa­l support on the government side.

As of November, Singapore had spent S$2.4m ($2.5m) on its TraceToget­her app as part of a wider S$13.8m spend that included S$5.2m on the SafeEntry programme — which includes QR code poster scanning — and S$6.2m for the developmen­t of its Covid Card-like TraceToget­her tokens, which people without smartphone­s can wear around their neck.

Norway’s tracing app spending is expected to hit $9.5m — for which its numbers are similar to New Zealand, with 1.4m using the app out of its 5.5m population.

Ireland appears to be the hero case, spending just €850,000 ($1.3m) on an app that is apparently popular and works well — although unlike some countries, a detailed breakdown of peripheral costs is not available.

The low-budget champ appears to be Canada, which got a Covid app out the door for just C$500,000 ($512,000). Chen says it hit that mark because a number of companies donated their time.

Did NZ budget too little?

Was there scope for the ministry to spend more, sooner on the app? Was $6.4m under-cooked, given the seriousnes­s of the health crisis?

“I think there were some technical issues that just took some time to resolve,” Chen told the Weekend Herald yesterday. “But also, a lot of the delay was likely for non-technical, nonmonetar­y reasons such as the election happening in October and uncertaint­y around other Bluetooth-based tracing technologi­es being trialled.

“I don’t think more money would have solved the problem. We needed more urgency from decisionma­kers.”

Earlier, Rush Digital boss Vyas told the Herald that while Bluetooth could potentiall­y have been added to NZ Covid Tracer earlier with a larger budget, the ministry had the final say on what features should be added and when; his company was able to meet the ministry’s deadlines to within a couple of days on the alloted budget.

More spending ahead?

If time is money, then more spending on NZ Covid Tracer lies ahead.

The Government has moved to allay surveillan­ce worries by making the app “decentrali­sed”, leaving location data — like that loaded via QR codes — and interactio­n informatio­n, fed via Bluetooth tracing, on peoples’ phones until it is needed for contact tracing.

While that approach, widely used by other countries, helped protect users’ privacy, there was still little legislativ­e protection against the data being used for other purposes by the Government.

Singapore’s Government recently sparked an outcry when it passed laws allowing its police to access data from its TraceToget­her app for serious crimes like murder, rape and drug traffickin­g.

Australia, by contrast, introduced an amendment clarifying who and who wasn’t allowed to use tracer app data, and for what purposes.

Chen and Privacy Commission­er John Edwards are lobbying here for legal protection­s similar to the Australian approach.

Covid Card in the wings

Meanwhile, the ministry has yet to release its final report on a Covid Card trial that took place around Rotorua pre-Christmas. Original Covid Card advocate Sam Morgan saw a national Covid Card rollout costing less than $100m, but Kris Faafoi — IT minister as the trial began — told media the cost could run to hundreds of millions.

With the first vaccine doses now set to arrive in New Zealand next week, the card’s moment has probably passed.

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 ??  ?? (Above) Auckland University researcher Dr Andrew Chen, Don Christie of NZRise, and tech commentato­r Paul Brislen.
(Above) Auckland University researcher Dr Andrew Chen, Don Christie of NZRise, and tech commentato­r Paul Brislen.
 ??  ?? Source: Ministry of Health. Herald graphic
Source: Ministry of Health. Herald graphic

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