Apps and Covid-19

Considering the billions of people who have smart phones generally use apps on these devices, it's possible to reach people and draw extensive data from their devices.

PI has been repeatedly exposing how smartphone apps can put users' privacy and security at risk. For instance we revealed how popular non-Facebook apps leak data to Facebook beyond the user's control or knowledge. We recently revealed similar levels of exploitation by menstruation apps.

The reality is that smartphones are highly complex interactions between hardware (chips and processors and storage and antennas), operating systems (generally Apple and Google), app stores (Apple and Google again), platforms (analytics companies and social media companies), and the apps themselves.

China was an early mover on apps: people were required to install the Alipay Health Code app, fill in personal details, and then were issued with a QR code with one of three colours denoting quarantining status. The app reportedly shared location data with the police. 

Using apps in the context of Covid-19 is useful to the general public to help people to report their symptoms and to learn about the virus and the health response. Apps are now being explored to trace contacts through interaction and proximity analysis. 

They are also being explored as quarantining enforcement tools, monitoring location and interactions. In this context, they are not necessarily voluntary tools.

The apps can help you report, generate data without your involvement, or lift data from your device. The apps can store the data locally or send the data to servers. And they can leak data to analytics firms and social media platforms.

So the Norwegian health app stores location data for 30 days on a centralised server. The Colombian app asks people to provide their data and answer questions about participation at protests and ethnicity. 

The apps are generally poorly spread. The Singapore app apparently has been downloaded only by 13% of the population. The UK is aiming for at least 50% of the population with their app.  This is because they are mostly voluntary at the moment.

Even when 'voluntary', compulsory data entry varies. In Argentina the app for self-diagnosis requires people to include their National ID, email and phone number. 

We are concerned that the voluntary nature of these apps will be rescinded for travellers and when borders are re-opened. Yet meanwhile, according to reports from  Thailand, SIM cards and apps were provided to every foreigner and travelling Thai, expecting this data to report on their locations; and Hong Kong is using bracelets with an app on people under compulsory quarantine and shares their location with government over messaging platforms.

It's in this context that apps like the one developed for Home Quarantining by the Polish government. It requires phone numbers, reference photos, and regular check-ins. South Korea's app uses GPS to track locations to ensure against quarantine breach, sending alerts if people leave designated areas.

Finally, there is the ever-present monitoring that goes on as part of commercial exploitation. Facebook, Google, and analytics companies have been accumulating location data for years, sometimes in great detail and sometimes in aggregate.

Some apps are exploring storing limited data. Argentina's CoTrack, MIT Media Lab, and Oxford University's apps appear to collect location and proximity data on the device and share only with consent and with no identifying data.

31 Mar 2020
The Israeli defense minister, Naftali Bennett, has published a plan under which civilian companies including the controversial company NSO Group would cooperate with the defence establishment to fight the novel coronavirus after a sharp rise in reported cases indicated that existing methods of
31 Mar 2020
The State Disaster Management Authority of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, in collaboration with other government agencies, is developing tools to track the travel history of people who have tested positive for the novel coronavirus and those who are under quarantine at home. The COVID alerting
23 Mar 2020
The Indian medical AI start-up Qure.ai has released qScout, an AI-powered "virtual care platform". Intended to help governments, hospitals, and clinics, the qScout app is meant to identify high-risk individuals, assist with contact tracing, facilitate remote triage, read chest X-rays to identify
29 Mar 2020
The computer science department at IIT-Bombay has sent two proposals for mobile applications that can track quarantine violators to a variety of Indian public authorities including officials in the Ministry of Human Resource and Development, the Maharashtra state government, and the Brihanmumbai
30 Mar 2020
The Croatian government intends to enforce individual quarantine orders via a dedicated app, text message alerts, or location data provided by telecommunications companies. However, the government aims to comply with GDPR by targeting only those ordered into self-isolation and only tracking their
30 Mar 2020
The Argentinian company Urbetrack is developing a "Cuidate en casa" (Take Care of Yourself at Home) app that it will pitch to government agencies throughout the country. The goal is to contribute to remediating the health crisis by helping enforce quarantine. The plan is that users will download the
27 Mar 2020
As employees shift to working from home, their employers are buying and installing software to monitor them in their new location. Companies such as InterGuard, Time Doctor, Teramind, VeriClock, innerActiv, ActivTrak, and Hubstaff provide a combination of screen monitoring and productivity metrics
01 Apr 2020
Led by Germany's Fraunhofer Heinrich Hertz Institute for Telecoms, technologists and scientists from at least eight countries, are working on a proximity-based contact tracing technology that complies with GDPR. The Pan-European Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing project (PEPP-PT) is intended to
27 Mar 2020
The company that makes the Natural Cycles women’s fertility app has added n optional service to allow users to track Covid-19 symptoms as well as positive and negative tests. As part of its fertility service, the app already takes each user’s basal body temperature daily; enabling the additional
30 Mar 2020
The San Francisco-based big data company Grandata has created a heat map to show which areas of Argentina are best complying with the quarantine lockdown. Grandata used an "anonymised" dataset collected from apps that provide third parties with geolocation information. The heat map shows if an
01 Apr 2020
On April 1, Iceland launched an app that uses GPS to locate people who may have been in close contact with confirmed COVID-19 patients. A message containing a download link for the app will be sent to all Icelanders; downloading it and then agreeing to disclose GPS data are both voluntary, but for
30 Mar 2020
Learning from countries like South Korea, government of the Indian state Karnataka has assigned its ten-member COVID-19 task force, which includes IAS officers with expertise in the fields of technology, medicine and healthcare, to develop a system to the approximately 40,000 people who visited
02 Apr 2020
The surveillance tool supplier Cy4Gate is pitching surveillance tools to track every citizen and their contacts to multiple governments around the world, including their own. In a demonstration of the system, Governments using the system, which Cy4Gate calls "Human Interaction Tracking System (HITS)
04 Apr 2020
Israel's controversial NSO Group, which makes spyware that governments have used to target journalists and human rights activists, says it's in talks with Western governments to use its software to track the spread of the coronavirus. A demonstration, governments themselves, rather than NSO Group
28 Mar 2020
The World Health Organization will partner with major blockchain and technology companies to launch a distributed ledger-based platform to be dubbed "MiPasa" that it says will facilitate "fully private information sharing between individuals, state authorities, and health institutions" by cross
06 Mar 2020
Although the alerts about contacts with people infected by the coronavirus sent out via SMS by the South Korean government do not include names, the information included about people who tested positive for coronavirus, and their past locations can be revealingly detailed in some cases. Those who