Coronavirus tracing phone app launches with tens of thousands of downloads after government reassures public that cops won't be able to track your contacts - so will you use it?
- The COVIDSafe app is part of Scott Morrison's three-pronged COVID-19 plan
- It will work by recording those you've been in close contact with for 15-minutes
- Federal Government have made assurance the data will not be used by police
- The controversial new technology will not be made mandatory for Australians
- But 40 percent of the population need to download the app for it to be effective
- If there's widespread use of the app it may lead to further easing of restrictions
- Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19
The federal government is trying to allay privacy fears over a controversial new app, to help trace people who come into contact with someone with COVID-19.
CovidSafe went live at 6pm on Sunday and was downloaded more than 10,000 times in the first hour, holding a 3.7 out of five rating.
The app is based on Singapore's TraceTogether software, which records the Bluetooth connections a phone makes with others so the user can give that data to state health authorities if they catch the virus.
The government hopes a broader testing regime and the contact tracing app will lead to a relaxation of the economic shutdown sooner. It's expected to be launched on Sunday.
The COVIDSafe app uses bluetooth to record who you've been in contact with. The government say your data will only be turned over to health authorities if you have either tested positive for coronavirus or come in contact with someone whose been infected
The Federal Government have made it clear no law-enforcement agencies will have access to your data. Pictured: A woman in a protective face mask is seen walking across Princes Bridge in Melbourne using her mobile phone
Prime Minister Scott Morrison told ABC radio program, Macca, Australia All Over, that only health authorities would have access to the data.
"It's another tool we need to get back to normal as much as we can," he said.
He said the contact numbers picked up by a person's phone are only downloaded by a health officer when someone gets the coronavirus and gives permission.
"No other government agency can use this information, no one in the commonwealth government at all, and in state authorities, only the health officer can use it," he said.
"Not the police, not the welfare people, nowhere else. Just the health officer."
Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton, who has recovered from a bout of COVID-19, says it's a more effective approach than checking diaries or trying to remember where they had been.
"The beauty of the app is that it can have a handshake, if you like, with people that you've been in close proximity with, to find the phone," he told Sky Sunday Agenda.
He said the privacy issues had been dealt with.
"There are absolute protections that are guaranteed around the privacy," he said.
"All of us have numerous apps on our phones which collect more data than we have here."
Police are pictured at Bondi Beach on April 22 enforcing social distancing restrictions
Labor home affairs spokeswoman Kristina Keneally said the app could be a great tool, but she wanted people's personal data to be guaranteed in legislation.
"Australians will only download the app if they have confidence that their privacy will be protected," she told the ABC's Insiders program.
"We are encouraging the government to ensure those privacy protections are built into the app, that the app has legislation around it that means that the data cannot be used for any other purpose except contact tracing.
"And that when this crisis is over, that authorities ensure that that data is deleted."
The Australian and International Pilots Association has backed its use, but with effective privacy safeguards in place.
AIPA President Mark Sedgwick said the aviation industry was in crisis and it was vital that the public recognised that Australia needed to reopen as quickly as possible.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison pictured delivering an Anzac Day address at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra, is urging Australians to download the software. 'If you download this app you'll be helping save someone's life,' he said
"With the appropriate safeguards, the COVID-19 tracing app will be a key tool in easing non-essential travel restrictions to ensure the survival of the aviation industry and Australia's economic recovery," Mr Sedgwick said in a statement.
"The government must ensure the application will be used solely for medical purposes and does not track the location of its users or store any data."
The government wants at least 40 per cent of the population to sign up so officials can do "industrial-scale" contact tracing.
Australian Nobel laureate and immunologist Peter Doherty said he would be signing up for it.
"Anything that helps us wrestle COVID-19 to the ground is a plus. Any privacy any of us had pretty much disappeared when we started using mobile phones, searching on line, buying stuff from Amazon or whatever," he tweeted on Sunday.
New research from the Australia Institute shows that 45 per cent of Australians say they will download and use the mobile app, while 28 per cent say they won't. A further 27 per cent were unsure.
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