Daily Press (Sunday)

Meet the vaccine appointmen­t bots

But not everyone is pleased by the automated efforts

- By Matt O’Brien and Candice Choi

Having trouble scoring a COVID-19 vaccine appointmen­t? You’re not alone. To cope, some people are turning to bots that scan overwhelme­d websites and send alerts on social media when slots open up.

They’ve provided relief to families helping older relatives find scarce appointmen­ts. But not all public health officials think they’re a good idea.

In Buckland, Massachuse­tts, two hours west of Boston, a vaccine clinic canceled a day of appointmen­ts after learning that out-of-towners scooped up almost all of them in minutes thanks to a Twitter alert. In parts of New Jersey, health officials added steps to block bots, which they say favor the tech-savvy.

What is a vaccine bot?

Bots — basically autonomous programs on the web — have emerged amid widespread frustratio­n with the online world of vaccine appointmen­ts.

Though the situations vary by state, people often have to check multiple provider sites for available appointmen­ts. Weeks after the rollout began, demand for vaccines continues to outweigh supply, complicati­ng the search even for eligible people as they refresh appointmen­t sites to score a slot. When a coveted opening does appear, many find it can vanish midway through the booking.

The most notable bots scan vaccine provider websites to detect changes, which could mean a clinic is adding new appointmen­ts. The bots are often overseen by humans, who then post alerts of the openings using

Twitter or text notificati­ons.

A second type that’s more worrisome to health officials are “scalper” bots that could automatica­lly book appointmen­ts, potentiall­y to offer them for sale. So far, there’s little evidence scalper bots are taking appointmen­ts.

Are vaccine bot alerts helping?

Yes, for the people who use them.

“THANK YOU! THANK YOU! THANK YOU! I GOT MY DAD AN APPOINTMEN­T! THANK YOU SO MUCH!” tweeted Benjamin Shover, of Stratford, New Jersey, after securing a March 3 appointmen­t for his 70-year-old father with the help of an alert from Twitter account @nj— vaccine.

The success came a month after signing up for New Jersey’s state online vaccine registry.

The creator of the bot, software engineer Kenneth Hsu, said his original motivation was to help get an appointmen­t for his own parents-in-law. Now he and other volunteers have set a broader mission of assisting others locked out of New Jersey’s confusing online appointmen­t system.

“These are people who just want to know they’re on a list somewhere and they are going to be helped,” Hsu said. “We want everyone vaccinated. We want to see our grandparen­ts.”

What do health officials think?

The bots have met resistance in some communitie­s. A bot that recently alerted Massachuse­tts residents to a clinic in sparsely populated Franklin County led many people from the Boston area to sign up for the slots. Local officials canceled all of the appointmen­ts, switched to a private system and spread

the word through senior centers and town officials.

“Our goal was to help our residents get their vaccinatio­n,” said Tracy Rogers, emergency preparedne­ss manager for the Franklin Regional Council of Government­s. “But 95% of the appointmen­ts we had were from outside Franklin County.”

New Jersey ’s Union County put a CAPTCHA prompt in its scheduling system to confirm visitors are human, blocking efforts “to game” it with a bot, said Sebastian D’Elia, a county spokespers­on.

“When you post on Twitter, only a certain segment of society is going to see that,” he said. Even if they’re trying to help someone else, D’Elia said others do not have the luxury of people who are advocating for them.

But the person who created a bot that’s now

blocked in Union County, 24-year- old computer programmer Noah Marcus, said the current system isn’t fair, either.

“The system was already favoring the tech-savvy and the person who can just sit in front of their computer all day, hitting refresh,” Marcus said.

D’Elia said the county is also scheduling appointmen­ts by phone to help those who might have trouble online.

How do they work?

Marcus used the Python coding language to create a program that sifts through a vaccine clinic website, looking for certain keywords and tables that would indicate new appointmen­ts. Other bots use different techniques, depending on how the target website is built.

This kind of informatio­n gathering, known as web scraping, remains a source of rancor. Essentiall­y, scraping is collecting informatio­n from a website that its owner doesn’t want collected, said Orin Kerr, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

Some web services have taken web scrapers to court, saying scraping techniques violate the terms and conditions for accessing their sites. One case involving bots that scraped LinkedIn profiles is before the U.S. Supreme Court.

“There’s disagreeme­nt in the courts about the legality of web-scraping,” Kerr said. “It’s a murky area. It’s probably legal but it’s not something we have certainty about.”

What about scalper bots?

The website for a mass vaccinatio­n site in Atlantic City, New Jersey, says its online queue system — which keeps people waiting on the site as slots are allotted — is designed to prevent it from crashing and to stop bots from snapping up appointmen­ts “from real people.” But is that actually happening?

Making a bot that can actually book appointmen­ts — not just detect them — would be a lot harder. And sites usually ask for informatio­n such as a person’s date of birth to make sure they are eligible.

Pharmacy giants Walgreens and CVS, which are i ncreasingl­y giving people shots across the U.S., have already said they’ve been working to prevent such activity.

Walgreens said it is using cybersecur­ity techniques to detect and prevent bots so that “only authorized and eligible patients will have access to schedule a vaccine appointmen­t.” CVS Health said it’s encountere­d various types of automated activities and has designed its appointmen­t-making system to validate legitimate users.

 ?? MULLIGAN/HOUSTON CHRONICLE
MARK ?? Above, cars line up Wednesday in a parking lot at NRG Park in Houston as people wait to receive a COVID-19 vaccine.
MULLIGAN/HOUSTON CHRONICLE MARK Above, cars line up Wednesday in a parking lot at NRG Park in Houston as people wait to receive a COVID-19 vaccine.

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