European coronavirus contact tracing app sparks uproar in the privacy community

European coronavirus contact tracing app sparks uproar in the privacy community

4 years ago
Anonymous $9CO2RSACsf

https://tech.newstatesman.com/security/european-coronavirus-contact-tracing-app-sparks-uproar-in-the-privacy-community

The European Commission has called for a pan-European approach to contact tracing apps that track the spread of coronavirus across borders. But what form such technology could take has stoked intense debate in the continent’s privacy community. 

A prominent European tech initiative, the Pan-European Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing (PEPP-PT), is developing technology that can be used to build contact tracing apps that use Bluetooth. The European Commission endorsed PEPP-PT’s framework in its guidelines for member states on adopting coronavirus tracking technology, as an initiative that “intends to support the development of national initiatives that pursue a fully privacy-preserving approach by providing ready-to-use, well-tested, and validated modules and tools”. Today it was reported that Italy plans to roll out an app from tech startup Bending Spoons, part of the PEPP-PT initiative. Another member of PEPP-PT is Christophe Fraser, Professor at the Nuffield Department of Medicine at University of Oxford, who has also been involved with working on the NHSX app in the UK. 

European coronavirus contact tracing app sparks uproar in the privacy community

Apr 17, 2020, 8:28pm UTC
https://tech.newstatesman.com/security/european-coronavirus-contact-tracing-app-sparks-uproar-in-the-privacy-community > The European Commission has called for a pan-European approach to contact tracing apps that track the spread of coronavirus across borders. But what form such technology could take has stoked intense debate in the continent’s privacy community.  > A prominent European tech initiative, the Pan-European Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing (PEPP-PT), is developing technology that can be used to build contact tracing apps that use Bluetooth. The European Commission endorsed PEPP-PT’s framework in its guidelines for member states on adopting coronavirus tracking technology, as an initiative that “intends to support the development of national initiatives that pursue a fully privacy-preserving approach by providing ready-to-use, well-tested, and validated modules and tools”. Today it was reported that Italy plans to roll out an app from tech startup Bending Spoons, part of the PEPP-PT initiative. Another member of PEPP-PT is Christophe Fraser, Professor at the Nuffield Department of Medicine at University of Oxford, who has also been involved with working on the NHSX app in the UK.