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Would you install PAP's Trace Together App?

pumpkin

Alfrescian
Loyal
Singapore launches TraceTogether mobile app to boost COVID-19 contact tracing efforts
The TraceTogether app was launched on Mar 20, 2020 to support ongoing COVID-19 contact tracing efforts. (Photo: Hanidah Amin)

By Tang See Kit@SeeKitCNA

and Aqil Haziq Mahmud@AqilHaziqCNA
20 Mar 2020 06:56PM (Updated: 20 Mar 2020 11:38PM)

SINGAPORE: A new mobile application called TraceTogether was launched on Friday (Mar 20) to support ongoing contact tracing efforts amid the COVID-19 outbreak in Singapore.

By downloading the app and consenting to participate in it, TraceTogether allows users to "proactively help" in the contact tracing process, according to a joint press release.

The TraceTogether app, which was developed by the Government Technology Agency (GovTech) in collaboration with MOH over the past eight weeks, can be downloaded by anyone with a Singapore mobile number and a Bluetooth-enabled smartphone.

TraceTogether QR code
Users can scan the QR code to download the TraceTogether app on their phone.

After giving consent during the set-up of the app, users will need to turn on their Bluetooth, as well as enable push notifications and location permissions.

The app works by exchanging short-distance Bluetooth signals between phones to detect other users of the app who are in close proximity. Current MOH guidelines define close proximity as two metres apart, or up to five metres, for 30 minutes.

READ: All events, gatherings with 250 participants or more must be suspended to further reduce COVID-19 spread

READ: Plans in place to increase Singapore's capacity for COVID-19 patients if needed: Gan Kim Yong


Records of these encounters will be stored locally in the users’ phones and will not be sent to the authorities.

Users will only be asked to share these records when contacted by MOH as part of contact tracing investigations. If they refuse, they may be prosecuted under the Infectious Diseases Act.

Currently, contact tracing relies on the memory of interviewees. However, there have been instances when interviewees could not remember all their contacts or did not have information about people they had been in contact with.

The new app will not replace ongoing contact tracing efforts, but it will facilitate the process, enabling contact tracers to inform users who are close contacts of COVID-19 cases "more quickly".

READ: 40 new COVID-19 cases in Singapore, including 30 imported infections

Explore our interactive: All the COVID-19 cases in Singapore and the clusters and links between them


Dr Janil Puthucheary, Minister-in-charge of GovTech, said: "The process of contact tracing starts with a recall … and that is the only thing that this app intervenes with. It means that poor memory will no longer slow down the process of contact tracing.”

"In contact tracing process, time matters,” he added, noting that contact tracing remains a key part of the country’s strategy to limit local transmission of COVID-19 and this app will augment the speed at which that occurs.

“The faster the contact tracing process can be initiated and can identify the people at risk, the faster we can intervene and impose quarantine if necessary and limit spread locally," he told reporters at a press conference on Friday.

For a start, authorities hope to use the app to establish 25 per cent to 50 per cent of these close contacts.

“This enables users to take the necessary action sooner, such as monitoring his own health closely for signs of flu-like symptoms. Early detection could potentially help reduce the risk of the spread of the virus, and better protect our families and loved ones,” the release added.

The Smart Nation and Digital Government Group will be working with the public and private sectors to raise awareness of the app and encourage its adoption.
Speaking at the same press conference, Health Minister Gan Kim Yong said: "This app is very important and we encourage Singaporeans to download it and help us with contact tracing.

"If we are able to be even more effective in contact tracing, then we can be more effective in reducing the risk of local transmission."

Explore: Real-time interactive map of all the confirmed cases reported around the world

PRIVACY SAFEGUARDS
The authorities stressed that the use of the app is voluntary and that users have to give "explicit consent" to participate in TraceTogether.

This consent can be withdrawn anytime, according to GovTech.

The app also has several layers of security and privacy safeguards in place. For example, users will submit only their mobile numbers after downloading the app. Each phone will then be assigned a user ID.

This user ID is then used to generate temporary IDs at regular intervals. It is this temporary ID that is exchanged between the phones of TraceTogether users.
Such regular generation of temporary IDs protect users from eavesdropping and tracking overtime by malicious actors, according to GovTech.

READ: Singaporeans advised to defer all travel abroad amid heightened risk of imported COVID-19 cases
READ: Companies urged to impose leave of absence for staff who travelled during March holidays - MOM
READ: MFA urges Singaporean students overseas to consider returning home soon amid evolving COVID-19 situation


No other personal detail, such as names, will be collected. Neither does the app access a user’s phone contact list or address book.

The app also does not collect or use location data of any kind, such as GPS.
"The app doesn't identify 'where' the exposure to COVID-19 cases may have occurred. It only seeks to establish 'who' else might have been exposed to the virus," according to the TraceTogether website.

This means that location information can only be established by contact tracers during verbal interviews, it added.

All TraceTogether logs will be stored locally on the users’ phone in an encrypted form.

READ: Activities for seniors suspended for another 14 days as part of stricter safe distancing measures

READ: Recommendations on safe distancing measures rolled out for retail, F&B sectors to prevent COVID-19 spread


“The logs do not contain the user’s phone numbers but a set of cryptographically generated temporary IDs,” the joint press release said.

“The logs leave his or her phone only when he or she uses the app to send the information to authorities to facilitate contact tracing,” it added.

Even then, the authorities, including MOH and GovTech, have no knowledge of the user’s data as these logs are only deciphered and analysed after the user sends the information.

Other safeguards include how the app will only be active during diseasee outbreaks.

For instance after contact tracing ceases, the app will prompt users to deactivate its functionality.
 

LaoTze

Alfrescian
Loyal
Do you trust those fucking MIWs?
Can MIWs ever be trusted?
Have the MIWs ever think of us at all?

Will their app do a lot lot lot more than what MIW claim?



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Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
I will most certainly support whatever measures are taken by the PAP because they are one of the few governments that know what they are doing to deal with this pandemic.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
I do have to point out though that although I am 100% supportive of this government initiative I will still have to disable location services when I visit my regular Geylang brothel because I am far more kiabor than I am of the PAP.

PAP will fine me and jail me but bor will take me to the cleaners and leave me penniless and alone.
 

LaoTze

Alfrescian
Loyal
I do have to point out though that although I am 100% supportive of this government initiative I will still have to disable location services when I visit my regular Geylang brothel because I am far more kiabor than I am of the PAP.

PAP will fine me and jail me but bor will take me to the cleaners and leave me penniless and alone.


You never be alone or walk alone

Ma Palm and her five daughters will never leave you as they love you very much






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laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I wouldn't do it even if I were paid to do so. :rolleyes:

What's on my phone: communication apps, photo/camera apps, Maps, calculator, calendar, clock, note/memo app, a browser. The bare necessities I need everyday.

No games: they drain battery, hog up storage space and distract you.

No social media (Facebook, Instagram) apps. Also includes dating apps and Linkedin etc.

No platform transaction apps e.g. hotel booking, food delivery, Grab etc.

No commercial rewards apps e.g. Capitalmalls Rewards.

No banking app. Don't want to do banking on my phone, or use it as a token.

And most definitely not something invented by the PAP regime. Including town council apps.
For example, this:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.surbana.itownsg
 

Byebye Penis

Alfrescian
Loyal
Many gov agencies have instructed their staff to install it.

1. It is a spyware.
2. You are legally-required to release information to the authorities if someone near/related to you is infected.
3. It will drain your phone battery.
 
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