Health Officials Say 'No Thanks' to Contact-Tracing Tech

Health Officials Say 'No Thanks' to Contact-Tracing Tech

4 years ago
Anonymous $pSba0tWIcA

https://www.wired.com/story/health-officials-no-thanks-contact-tracing-tech/

When Apple and Google announced three weeks ago that they'd developed software to help fight the coronavirus pandemic, it was a big deal. The tech giants are fierce competitors. They rarely cooperate. And together, their software controls about 3 billion smartphones, equal to almost 40 percent of the world’s population.

It seemed clever, assuming the privacy implications could be worked out. The software would silently keep track of people who’d been near someone who tested positive for the virus, prompting those contacts to be tested and quarantined if necessary. The idea was to automate part of a laborious process called contact tracing, which public health officials use to stem the spread of an infectious disease. Thorough contact tracing, they say, is crucial to allowing the world's economies to reopen without reigniting infection rates. But few organizations, if any, have ever done contact tracing at the scale that will be required to contain Covid-19.

Health Officials Say 'No Thanks' to Contact-Tracing Tech

May 8, 2020, 11:27am UTC
https://www.wired.com/story/health-officials-no-thanks-contact-tracing-tech/ > When Apple and Google announced three weeks ago that they'd developed software to help fight the coronavirus pandemic, it was a big deal. The tech giants are fierce competitors. They rarely cooperate. And together, their software controls about 3 billion smartphones, equal to almost 40 percent of the world’s population. > It seemed clever, assuming the privacy implications could be worked out. The software would silently keep track of people who’d been near someone who tested positive for the virus, prompting those contacts to be tested and quarantined if necessary. The idea was to automate part of a laborious process called contact tracing, which public health officials use to stem the spread of an infectious disease. Thorough contact tracing, they say, is crucial to allowing the world's economies to reopen without reigniting infection rates. But few organizations, if any, have ever done contact tracing at the scale that will be required to contain Covid-19.