Apple and Google are building a coronavirus tracking system into iOS and Android (WATCH VIDEO)
- Potentially a huge step forward in the fight against COVID-19
On Friday, Apple and Google announced a system
for tracking the spread of the new coronavirus, allowing users to share
data through Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) transmissions and approved apps
from health organizations.
The new system, which is laid out in a series of documents and white papers,
would use short-range Bluetooth communications to establish a voluntary
contact-tracing network, keeping extensive data on phones that have
been in close proximity with each other. Official apps from public
health authorities will get access to this data, and users who download
them can report if they’ve been diagnosed with COVID-19. The system will
also alert people who download them to whether they were in close
contact with an infected person.
Apple and Google will introduce a pair of iOS and Android
APIs in mid-May and make sure these health authorities’ apps can
implement them. During this phase, users will still have to download an
app to participate in contact-tracing, which could limit adoption. But
in the months after the API is complete, the companies will work on
building tracing functionality into the underlying operating system, as
an option immediately available to everyone with an iOS or Android
phone.
Contact tracing — which involves figuring out who an
infected person has been in contact with and trying to prevent them from
infecting others — is one of the most promising solutions for
containing COVID-19, but using digital surveillance technology to do it
raises massive privacy concerns and questions about effectiveness. Earlier this week, the American Civil Liberties Union raised concerns about tracking users with phone data, arguing that any system would need to be limited in scope and avoid compromising user privacy.
Unlike some other methods — like, say, using GPS data — this Bluetooth
plan wouldn’t track people’s physical location. It would basically pick
up the signals of nearby phones at 5-minute intervals and store the
connections between them in a database. If one person tests positive for
the novel coronavirus, they could tell the app they’ve been infected,
and it could notify other people whose phones passed within close range
in the preceding days.
To help public health officials slow the spread of #COVID19, Google & @Apple are working on a contact tracing approach designed with strong controls and protections for user privacy. @tim_cook and I are committed to working together on these efforts.https://t.co/T0j88YBcFu— Sundar Pichai (@sundarpichai) April 10, 2020
The system also takes a number of steps to prevent people
from being identified, even after they’ve shared their data. While the
app regularly sends information out over Bluetooth, it broadcasts an
anonymous key rather than a static identity, and those keys cycle every
15 minutes to preserve privacy. Even once a person shares that they’ve
been infected, the app will only share keys from the specific period in
which they were contagious.
Crucially, there is no centrally accessible master list
of which phones have matched, contagious or otherwise. That’s because
the phones themselves are performing the cryptographic calculations
required to protect privacy. The central servers only maintain the
database of shared keys, rather than the interactions between those
keys.
Contact tracing can help slow the spread of COVID-19 and can be done without compromising user privacy. We’re working with @sundarpichai & @Google to help health officials harness Bluetooth technology in a way that also respects transparency & consent. https://t.co/94XlbmaGZV— Tim Cook (@tim_cook) April 10, 2020
The method still has potential weaknesses. In crowded
areas, it could flag people in adjacent rooms who aren’t actually
sharing space with the user, making people worry unnecessarily. It may
also not capture the nuance of how long someone was exposed — working
next to an infected person all day, for example, will expose you to a
much greater viral load than walking by them on the street. And it
depends on people having apps in the short term and up-to-date
smartphones in the long term, which could mean it’s less effective in
areas with lower connectivity.
It’s also a relatively new program, and Apple and Google
are still talking to public health authorities and other stakeholders
about how to run it. This system probably can’t replace old-fashioned
methods of contact tracing — which involve interviewing infected people
about where they’ve been and who they’ve spent time with — but it could
offer a high-tech supplement using a device that billions of people
already own.
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