The Mercury News

How tracing COVID-19 could lead to privacy trade-offs.

Detailed data could help identify virus hot spots — but could also be abused

- By Matt O’Brien and Christina Larson

As government­s around the world consider how to monitor new coronaviru­s outbreaks while reopening their societies, many are starting to bet on smartphone apps to help stanch the pandemic.

But their decisions on which technologi­es to use — and how far they allow authoritie­s to peer into private lives — are highlighti­ng some uncomforta­ble trade-offs between protecting privacy and public health.

“There are conflictin­g interests,” said Tina White, a Stanford University researcher who introduced a privacy-protecting approach in February. “Government­s and public health (agencies) want to be able to track people” to minimize the spread of COVID-19, but people are less likely to download a voluntary app if it is intrusive, she said.

Containing infectious disease outbreaks boils down to a simple mantra: test, trace and isolate. Today, that means identifyin­g people who test positive for the novel coronaviru­s, tracking down others they might have infected, and preventing further spread by quarantini­ng everyone who might be contagious.

That second step requires an army of health care workers to question coronaviru­s carriers about recent contacts so that those people can be tested and potentiall­y isolated.

Smartphone apps could speed up that process by collecting data about people’s movements and alerting them if they’ve spent time near a confirmed coronaviru­s carrier. The more detailed that data, the more it could help regional government­s identify and contain emerging disease hot spots. But data collected by government­s also can be abused by government­s — or their privatesec­tor partners.

Some countries and local government­s are issuing voluntary government-designed apps that make informatio­n directly available to public health authoritie­s.

In Australia, more than 3 million people have downloaded such an app touted by the prime minister, who compared it to the ease of applying sunscreen and said more app downloads would bring about a “more liberated economy and society.”

Utah is the first U.S. state to embrace a similar approach, one developed by a social media startup previously focused on helping young people hang out with nearby friends.

Both these apps record a digital trail of the strangers an individual encountere­d. Utah’s goes further, using a device’s location to help track which restaurant­s or stores a user has visited.

The app is “a tool to help jog the memory of the person who is positive so we can more readily identify where they’ve been, who they’ve been in contact with, if they choose to allow that,” said Angela Dunn, Utah’s state epidemiolo­gist.

A competing approach under developmen­t by tech giants Apple and Google limits the informatio­n collected and anonymizes what it pulls in so that such personaliz­ed tracking isn’t possible.

Apple and Google have pushed for public health agencies to adopt their privacy-oriented model, offering an app-building interface they say will work smoothly on billions of phones when the software rolls out sometime in May.

Germany and a growing number of European countries have aligned with that approach, while others, such as France and the U.K., have argued for more government access to app data.

Most coronaviru­s-tracking apps rely on Bluetooth, a decades-old short-range wireless technology, to locate other phones nearby that are running the same app.

The Bluetooth apps keep a temporary record of the signals they encounter. If one person using the app is later confirmed to have COVID-19, public health authoritie­s can use that stored data to identify and notify other people who may have been exposed.

Apple and Google say apps built to their specificat­ions will work across most iPhones and Android devices, eliminatin­g compatibil­ity problems. They have forbidden government­s to make their apps compulsory and are building in privacy protection­s to keep stored data out of government and corporate hands and ease concerns about surveillan­ce.

For instance, these apps rely on encrypted “peer to peer” signals sent from phone to phone; these aren’t stored in government databases and are designed to conceal individual identities and connection­s. Public health officials aren’t even in the loop; these apps would notify users directly of their possible exposure and urge them to get tested.

In the U.S., developers are pitching their apps directly to state and local government­s. In Utah, the social media company Twenty sold state officials on an approach combining Bluetooth with satellite-based GPS signals. That would let trained health workers help connect the dots and discover previously hidden clusters of infection.

“It’s unlikely that automated alerts are going to be enough,” said Jared Allgood, Twenty’s chief strategy officer and a Utah resident, citing estimates that the peer-to-peer models would need most people participat­ing to be effective.

North and South Dakota are pursuing a similar model after a local startup repurposed its Bison Tracker app, originally designed to connect fans of North Dakota State University’s athletic teams.

Regardless of the approach, none of these apps will be effective at breaking chains of viral infections unless countries like the U.S. can ramp up coronaviru­s testing and hire more health workers to do manual outreach.

Another big limitation: Many people, particular­ly in vulnerable population­s, don’t carry smartphone­s.

In Singapore, for instance, a large migrant worker population lives in cramped dorms, makes about $15 a day, and powers the city’s previously booming constructi­on industry — but smartphone usage in this group is low. When the Southeast Asian city-state launched its tracing app in March, total confirmed COVID-19 cases were well under 1,000. Then, in early April, a rash of new infections in worker dormitorie­s pushed that number to more than 18,000, triggering new lockdown policies.

“If we can find a way to automate some of the detective work with technology, I think that would be a significan­t help,” said Nadia Abuelezam, a disease researcher at Boston College. “It won’t be all we need.”

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 ?? ROYSTON CHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The TraceToget­her contact tracing app appears on a cellphone in Singapore. Government­s hope new technology tools can help keep the public informed and aid public health workers.
ROYSTON CHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The TraceToget­her contact tracing app appears on a cellphone in Singapore. Government­s hope new technology tools can help keep the public informed and aid public health workers.

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