| Literature DB >> 33156804 |
Li Du1, Vera Lúcia Raposo1,2, Meng Wang1.
Abstract
As the world struggles with the new COVID-19 pandemic, contact tracing apps of various types have been adopted in many jurisdictions for combating the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. However, even if they are successful in containing the virus within national borders, these apps are becoming ineffective as international travel is gradually resumed. The problem rests in the plurality of apps and their inability to operate in a synchronized manner, as well as the absence of an international entity with the power to coordinate and analyze the information collected by the disparate apps. The risk of creating a useless Tower of Babel of COVID-19 contact tracing apps is very real, endangering global health. This paper analyzes legal barriers for realizing the interoperability of contact tracing apps and emphasizes the need for developing coordinated solutions to promote safe international travel and global pandemic control. ©Li Du, Vera Lúcia Raposo, Meng Wang. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (http://mhealth.jmir.org), 27.11.2020.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; contact tracing apps; global health; privacy; public health
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33156804 PMCID: PMC7704120 DOI: 10.2196/23194
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Technologies used in COVID-19 contact tracing apps and potential legal challenges.
| Technologies used for contact tracing apps | App examples, app name (country/region of origin) | Potential legal challenges |
| Location tracking by GPS |
Self-quarantine safety protection (South Korea) Epidemic Prevention and Health Information Code (China) National Government Service Platform (China) HaMagen (Israel) NZ COVID Tracer (New Zealand) COVID Safe Paths (United States) Healthy Together (Utah, United States) Care19 (North Dakota, United States) |
Personal privacy issues, including the disclosure of personal privacy location information, personal health information, etc [ It is not clear who will bear the responsibility if the users’ location is not accurate, the disease condition is reported incorrectly due to location information error, and there is a false report. If the state or the authorities adopt the technology on a large scale, but the technology fails due to satellite signals or technical failures, how can it be remedied? Some software shares data with the authorities, which could make it possible for the government to access personal location information. The issue is especially sensitive when it comes to the location of people of different races. Location can reveal a lot of personal information (eg, sexual orientation, religion, political affiliation) that is not directly related to pandemic control. With regard to apps that keep collected data in a central remote server, if the server is attacked, there will be a massive privacy breach. |
| Contact tracing by GPS |
Epidemic Prevention and Health Information Code (China) National Government Service Platform (China) HaMagen (Israel) NZ COVID Tracer (New Zealand) COVID Safe Paths (United States) Healthy Together (Utah, United States) Care19 (North Dakota, United States) |
All legal challenges for using GPS to track users’ location. Using GPS for contact tracing requires analyses of the location information of multiple users by means of big data. This involves methods for properly storing and using the personal information of users and other legal issues related to personal data privacy protection. |
| Contact tracing by Bluetooth |
TraceTogether (Singapore) COVIDSafe (Australia) Stopp Corona (Austria) ABTraceTogether (Alberta, Canada) COVID Alert (Canada) ProteGO (Poland) Corona-Warn-App (Germany) SwissCovid (Switzerland) HaMagen (Israel) COVID Safe Paths (United States) Healthy Together (Utah, United States) Care19 (North Dakota, United States) CovidWatch (United States) NOVID (United States) |
Although most of the software using Bluetooth technology has claimed that they will not obtain user information and will only warn people about the risk of disease through distance perception, data security is a big concern, as hackers may attack the Bluetooth firmware to obtain the user’s personal information and location data information [ Bluetooth technology faces many technical incompatibilities between devices, which will lead to incomplete information collection and, to some extent, the inability to effectively control the spread of the disease. Although privacy concerns remain, when Bluetooth relies on Bluetooth Low Energy technology, all information is stored in the user’s device (ie, a decentralized system), thus raising less privacy issues. |
| Self-reporting by users |
Epidemic Prevention and Health Information Code (China) National Government Service Platform (China) Self-quarantine safety protection (South Korea) HealthLynked COVID-19 Tracker (United States) Relief Central COVID-19 (United States) PatientSphere for COVID-19 (United States) Obvio-19 (United States) How We Feel (United States) COVID Safe Paths (United States) CovidWatcher (New York City, United States) Care19 (South Dakota, United States) MyBellevue (Washington, United States) Healthy Together (Utah, United States) COVID Alert (Canada) BC COVID-19 Support (British Columbia, Canada) King’s College London Covid-19 Symptom Reporting (United Kingdom) NZ COVID Tracer (New Zealand) |
Self-reporting software usually requires users to upload their own personal data. The software analyzes the location information and personal health data of multiple users by means of big data. This involves methods for properly storing and using the personal information of users and other legal issues related to personal data privacy protection. Under the absence of legal oversight, the self-reporting of health conditions by users can lead to the excessive collection of personal information by software. Centralized data storage may lead to the improper access of information and excessive dissemination of users’ personal information. Some self-reporting software shares data with the authorities, which can make it possible for the government to access personal information. There are no careful legal regulations to govern software and technology that collect data centrally for public health purposes in the context of pandemics. Who will be responsible for any false information? Will users that provide false information be held accountable? |
Examples of domestic and regional data laws applicable to data collection and data sharing of contact tracing apps.
| Countries or regions | Applicable data laws |
| The United States | Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act |
| The European Union | General Data Protection Regulation |
| Canada | Health Information Act |
| China | Cyber Security Law of the People’s Republic of China |
| Australia | Privacy Amendment (Public Health Contact Information) Act |
Figure 1Potential solutions (light blue box) to the technologic Tower of Babel and barriers to implementing these solutions (dark blue box).