Philippine Daily Inquirer

Contact tracing apps: Public health vs data privacy

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Contact tracing, together with testing and isolating COVID-19 patients, helps contain the spread of the virus, absent a vaccine. Digital technology can speed up contact tracing by using mobile apps. With the use of communicat­ions data, GPS, and/ or Bluetooth technology, the app determines when users are in close proximity with each other for a sufficient­ly long period of time, enough to transmit the virus. When a user reports COVID-19-LIKE symptoms to the app, it will trace the devices that came in contact with the user’s device and notify the concerned parties and authoritie­s.

Despite its promised benefits, contact tracing apps are raising a growing number of data privacy concerns.

In April, the Philippine­s’ Inter-agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases adopted Staysafe.ph as the country’s “official social-distancing, health-condition-reporting, and contact-tracing system.” However, in early June, former Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology Undersecre­tary Eliseo Rio Jr. questioned Staysafe.ph’s effectiven­ess, saying it is “a health monitoring app with a location tracker,” but has “no contact tracing capability.” He added that some of the app’s permission­s were excessive. Lawyer Jam Jacob of the Foundation for Media Alternativ­es, meanwhile, raised concerns about accountabi­lity. Developed and managed by a private firm, the app’s website identifies the National Task Force (NTF) Against COVID-19 as the data controller. The NTF, however, is composed of multiple government agencies, so accountabi­lity is not clear for now.

In response to these issues, the IATF

JESTINE MENDOZA issued Resolution No. 45 on June 10 directing Multisys Technologi­es Corp. (Multisys), Staysafe.ph’s developer, to enter into an agreement with and donate the app to the Department of Health (DOH). The donation shall include the app’s source code, all data, data ownership, and intellectu­al property. All data collected shall be migrated to the DOH’S COVID-KAYA system. Multisys has 30 days to comply with the directive, which means the MOA with the DOH should be signed by July 10.

Some countries and organizati­ons have issued guidelines and standards for the use of digital proximity tracking technologi­es. The World Health Organizati­on (WHO), the European Union (EU), the United Kingdom’s (UK) Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office (ICO), and tech companies like Apple and Google highlight three common principles: transparen­cy of purpose, limited data retention, and accountabi­lity of authoritie­s.

Transparen­cy here means providing users with clear and reader-friendly informatio­n about the purpose of the app, types of data to be collected, how data will be stored, processed, and shared, and how long the data will be retained.

Limited retention means that data should only be kept by the app for a specific period of time. The WHO suggests that data collected for battling COVID-19 should be deleted following the pandemic. Should data be retained for research and future epidemic planning, the UK ICO suggests that data be anonymized.

Accountabi­lity means that the data controller is clearly identified. Based on EU standards, in cases where there are different actors involved, their roles and responsibi­lities must be defined and explained to the app’s users.

In the Philippine­s, the National Privacy Commission has issued a bulletin on Covid-19-related apps and tools, emphasizin­g the need to make their purpose clear and data collection practices transparen­t.

As enshrined in the Data Privacy Act, data collection must be based on proportion­ality, i.e., the “processing of personal informatio­n must be relevant to, and must not exceed, the declared purpose.”

Arguably, digital technology offers a faster and more efficient means of contact tracing. However, more than the app, users need to trust the system and the people behind the technology. From the outset, government­s and app developers must work harder at responding to data privacy and security concerns. Technology, after all, is only as good as how people use it, and as valuable as the results it helps society achieve.

(With inputs from Lito Averia, Liel Pascual, Grace Mirandilla-santos, and William Yu)

Jestine Mendoza is a program officer for The Asia Foundation-philippine­s’ Economic Reform and Developmen­t Entreprene­urship unit. She also works with Secure Connection­s, the Foundation’s cybersecur­ity project. The views expressed in this article do not necessaril­y reflect the views of The Asia Foundation-philippine­s.

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