Apple and Google detail COVID-19 contact tracing program, focus on privacy [u]

Posted:
in General Discussion edited April 2020
Apple and Google on Monday provided further detail on their upcoming contact tracing technology, noting the program will remain voluntary and that only public health organizations will be able to create apps built on the platform.

Contact Tracing
The contact tracing system uses Bluetooth to monitor proximity to other users.


On Friday, the Silicon Valley giants announced a new cross-platform Bluetooth technology that could help track and ultimately reduce the spread of coronavirus.

Contact tracing solutions are designed to track virus propagation by building a comprehensive history of who an infected or potentially infected person came in contact with over a set period of time. Apple and Google seek to digitize, and thereby largely automate, what is traditionally a manual process.

The system, which will work across Android 6.0 and iOS 13 devices, will be released in two phases. First, Apple and Google will issue developer APIs that public health organizations can use to build contact tracing apps. A second phase will see that functionality baked deeper into the iOS and Android operating systems, foregoing the need for an app. OS integration could also save battery life by minimizing background processing.

Across each phase, Apple and Google said that the system is being built out on principles of "privacy, transparency and user control."

An illustration of how and when users will receive a notification from the system.
An illustration of how and when users will receive a notification from the system.


When implemented, the technology will use a device's onboard Bluetooth hardware to keep tabs on who the owner comes into close proximity with. Specifically, Bluetooth identifiers are exchanged and saved locally.

If a participant later tests positive for COVID-19, and agrees to share that information, their device will send 14 days of contact keys to a central server. Phones periodically download positive broadcast beacons, or beacons of users who reported testing positive for COVID-19, and look for matches among a list of locally stored, anonymized identifiers. If a match is found, an alert is displayed with links to critical healthcare information.

Apple and Google have built the system from the ground up to respect strong privacy policies. No location data or personally identifiable information is collected as part of the system, and each device's Bluetooth identifier will change periodically to prevent unwanted tracking.

The companies also confirmed on Monday that the system will require explicit user consent at multiple stages and that only public health authorities will be able to use it to manage and track the ongoing pandemic.

Additionally, the list of people a user comes into contact with is only stored locally on a device and isn't shared unless they opt to share it, such as after a positive diagnosis. The actual identities of people who test positive for COVID-19 aren't revealed to Apple, Google or other users, and the companies can disable the system on a regional basis when it is no longer needed.

To combat the potential for abuse or false positives, it also appears that notifications will only go out if a public health authority confirms a diagnosis.

Apple and Google said that the first phase of the contact tracing rollout will occur in mid-May, with the operating system update arriving "in the coming months."

Update: Apple and Google in a statement to TechCrunch said the contact tracing project will support Android 6.0 and iOS 13 devices.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 13
    I didn’t think ‘privacy’ and ‘Google’ could be put in the same sentence.
    cfilipponi
  • Reply 2 of 13
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,213member
    I didn’t think ‘privacy’ and ‘Google’ could be put in the same sentence.
    Gorsh, that thar's a thighslapper ain't it?  Har, har!
    ctt_zhjony0Carnage
  • Reply 3 of 13
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,213member
    I have the full intention of opting in as soon as it becomes available. Google will be doing this thru Play Services so no device update or OEM/carrier involvement is needed.
    edited April 2020 ctt_zhjony0daven
  • Reply 4 of 13
    davendaven Posts: 696member
    gatorguy said:
    I have the full intention of opting in as soon as it becomes available. Google will be doing this thru Play Services so no device update or OEM/carrier involvement is needed.
    ditto.
  • Reply 5 of 13
    Will never use this and no one can force me. 
    cfilipponi
  • Reply 6 of 13
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,213member
    Will never use this and no one can force me. 
    LOL, no one is trying to. 
  • Reply 7 of 13
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    We once had the best public health systems in the world
    We once a government that Americans trusted and were proud to follow

    Now, over the past 2 decades both those have been largely destroyed.

    So now, in this crisis we are left with a hodge-podge of piecemeal solutions patched together by a variety private & public organizations.

    What we are forgetting is that this is not the first pathogen to threaten the world and the country and it won't be the last.   So, are we going to handle the next one any better than this -- which can only be described as a Keystone Cops fiasco?
    cyberzombie
  • Reply 8 of 13
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,213member
    We once had the best public health systems in the world
    We once a government that Americans trusted and were proud to follow

    Now, over the past 2 decades both those have been largely destroyed.

    Gosh, out of the desert... We finally agree, tho I'd go back three decades. We've had quite the run since the 90's.
    edited April 2020
  • Reply 9 of 13
    So many questions:
    If Alice works in a grocery store or, heaven forbid, an ICU, will she get blasted with terrifying notifications every day? Can she turn them off?
    Can Alice opt out of having Bob send her contact information to the cloud? (Not if it works like an app requesting your contacts.)
    "Public health authorities" like the ones that have not even implemented HTTPS resulting in Microsoft rolling back their plan to require encryption for all web sites in their web browser and operating system due to the current crisis?
  • Reply 10 of 13
    gatorguy said:
    Will never use this and no one can force me. 
    LOL, no one is trying to. 
    LOL, no one is asking your permission. You are "Alice" in this scenario. At no point is Alice asked for her permission to share her contact information with "public health authorities". It just happens and then she gets notified (as do the authorities) with unspecified consequences.
  • Reply 11 of 13
    crowleycrowley Posts: 10,453member
    gatorguy said:
    Will never use this and no one can force me. 
    LOL, no one is trying to. 
    LOL, no one is asking your permission. You are "Alice" in this scenario. At no point is Alice asked for her permission to share her contact information with "public health authorities". It just happens and then she gets notified (as do the authorities) with unspecified consequences.
    Did you miss the first line of the article?
    Apple and Google on Monday provided further detail on their upcoming contact tracing technology, noting the program will remain voluntary and that only public health organizations will be able to create apps built on the platform.

  • Reply 12 of 13
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,213member
    gatorguy said:
    Will never use this and no one can force me. 
    LOL, no one is trying to. 
    LOL, no one is asking your permission. You are "Alice" in this scenario. At no point is Alice asked for her permission to share her contact information with "public health authorities". It just happens and then she gets notified (as do the authorities) with unspecified consequences.
    If you take the time to read how the program works you'll worry less. Do you know where to find Apple's explanation of it? 
  • Reply 13 of 13
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,213member
    So many questions:
    If Alice works in a grocery store or, heaven forbid, an ICU, will she get blasted with terrifying notifications every day? Can she turn them off?
    Can Alice opt out of having Bob send her contact information to the cloud? (Not if it works like an app requesting your contacts.)
    "Public health authorities" like the ones that have not even implemented HTTPS resulting in Microsoft rolling back their plan to require encryption for all web sites in their web browser and operating system due to the current crisis?
    This could not be explained in more simple terms:
    https://9to5mac.com/2020/04/14/contact-tracing-privacy/
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