CRCYDCMar 19, 2020

Apps Gone Rogue: Maintaining Personal Privacy in an Epidemic

arXiv:2003.08567v2151 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses privacy and ethical concerns in public health technology during epidemics, such as COVID-19, but is incremental as it builds on existing discussions without introducing new methods or data.

The paper examines mobile-phone contact-tracing technologies for epidemic containment, highlighting their potential to improve accuracy and speed over traditional methods, but also risks like mass surveillance and privacy violations. It reviews existing approaches, proposes security enhancements to mitigate risks, and discusses trade-offs in deployment.

Containment, the key strategy in quickly halting an epidemic, requires rapid identification and quarantine of the infected individuals, determination of whom they have had close contact with in the previous days and weeks, and decontamination of locations the infected individual has visited. Achieving containment demands accurate and timely collection of the infected individual's location and contact history. Traditionally, this process is labor intensive, susceptible to memory errors, and fraught with privacy concerns. With the recent almost ubiquitous availability of smart phones, many people carry a tool which can be utilized to quickly identify an infected individual's contacts during an epidemic, such as the current 2019 novel Coronavirus crisis. Unfortunately, the very same first-generation contact tracing tools have been used to expand mass surveillance, limit individual freedoms and expose the most private details about individuals. We seek to outline the different technological approaches to mobile-phone based contact-tracing to date and elaborate on the opportunities and the risks that these technologies pose to individuals and societies. We describe advanced security enhancing approaches that can mitigate these risks and describe trade-offs one must make when developing and deploying any mass contact-tracing technology. With this paper, our aim is to continue to grow the conversation regarding contact-tracing for epidemic and pandemic containment and discuss opportunities to advance this space. We invite feedback and discussion.

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