Las Vegas Review-Journal

Administra­tive state can put bug in your phone

- DEBRA J. SAUNDERS Debra J. Saunders, former Review-journal White House correspond­ent, is a fellow at the Discovery Institute’s Chapman Center for Citizen Leadership. Contact her at dsaunders@discovery.org.

I

Nthe age of cellphones and the internet, consumers often face a simple choice: convenienc­e or privacy? Do we let Big Tech have access to our private communicat­ions and free email accounts because it’s so easy? Once you’ve said yes — and who among us has not? — it’s not a stretch to think that Big Data already has almost all your informatio­n, so why get picky at the next juncture?

Add COVID to the mix, and — presto — there’s a health component as well. Big Tech can use contact-tracing apps to monitor contacts with Covid-positive individual­s. Which opens the door to a role for Big Government.

This story begins in midjune 2021, when, disappoint­ed that too few residents voluntaril­y installed a COVID contact-tracing app, Massachuse­tts began working with Google to secretly install the app in more than 1 million Android mobile phones or devices.

Most people didn’t know that their whereabout­s were being tracked and didn’t have a chance to opt out.

The New Civil Liberties Alliance filed a class-action lawsuit against the Massachuse­tts Department of Public Health to end the “spyware” program with its “brazen disregard for civil liberties.”

Stanford epidemiolo­gist Jay Bhattachar­ya warned that contact-tracing technology can be problemati­c because it’s “very difficult” to figure out who gave COVID to you. While many health profession­als were “enamored” of contact tracing, Bhattachar­ya added, time delays also diminished the method’s efficacy.

Fun fact: Massachuse­tts ended its contact-tracing program in December 2021.

“I don’t think this app is giving them anything,”

NCLA litigation counsel Sheng Li told me, especially since the Commonweal­th shut down the program. “I do just hope that this lawsuit may be a wake-up call,” Sheng added.

Massachuse­tts officials declined comment. I can see why. The Bay State set up a program that gave the government access to citizens’ whereabout­s without having to obtain a warrant.

When users try to delete the app, the app nonetheles­s reappears, according to numerous consumer complaints. Thus, the app robs users not only of an expectatio­n of privacy but also of data usage they did not anticipate. Sheng called that a “taking” — the government seizing property without compensati­on.

I started out this exercise presuming good faith — that health care profession­als and tech companies wanted to do the right thing and prevent the spread of COVID. They got carried away and trampled on citizens’ constituti­onal rights, but then, many mistakes were made in the heat of COVID panic.

Almost a year since the program ended, for some reason, the spyware remains in the devices of unwitting consumers. So the goodwill isn’t looking so good right now. But really, as a happy American, I wonder, how bad can it actually get?

Sheng has an answer for that. An immigrant who left China as a kid, Sheng noted that Beijing is working “hand in hand with Big Tech” — tracking citizen whereabout­s and shutting down cities or districts where COVID is found. “They know exactly where every one of their citizens is going,” he said, and what they are doing.

In a technocrac­y, freedom is not a priority. Neither is privacy.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States