Coronavirus: Apple iPhones Can Contact-Trace Without COVID-19 App (bbc.com) 60
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the BBC: Apple has begun letting its iPhones carry out contact-tracing without the need for users to download an official Covid-19 app.
As an alternative, owners are being invited to opt in to a scheme called Exposure Notifications Express (ENE). This keeps a 14-day log of other phones detected via Bluetooth and serves an alert if one or more of their users is later diagnosed to have the virus. The local public health authority will determine what the notification says. It might tell the user to download a more fully functional app for further guidance. However, it also gives officials the option of not developing an app of their own, in which case the user could be directed to go to a testing centre or to call a hotline for more information.
IPhone owners who become ill without having received a warning message can still cause a cascade of alerts to be sent to others. But since they will not have an app to start the process, this will be done by tapping on a text message sent by the public health authority to their smartphone after a positive diagnosis. The facility is being rolled out as part of the latest update to Apple's mobile operating system, iOS 13.7, which has just been released. Android is expected to have a similar scheme that will launch later this month. "It will go by the same name, but rather than go down the app-less route, Google has opted to automatically create a basic coronavirus tracing app for public health authorities based on the criteria they provide," reports the BBC.
IPhone owners who become ill without having received a warning message can still cause a cascade of alerts to be sent to others. But since they will not have an app to start the process, this will be done by tapping on a text message sent by the public health authority to their smartphone after a positive diagnosis. The facility is being rolled out as part of the latest update to Apple's mobile operating system, iOS 13.7, which has just been released. Android is expected to have a similar scheme that will launch later this month. "It will go by the same name, but rather than go down the app-less route, Google has opted to automatically create a basic coronavirus tracing app for public health authorities based on the criteria they provide," reports the BBC.
I wondered about this (Score:4, Interesting)
Between all the sensors the modern pocket convergence Skynet node has:
You'd think smartphone capture x OS providers would be able to provide near-real-time social distancing information. I'm wondering why one of the more totalitarian administrations hasn't put together a solution for this -- if they had, it's not something you could (or would try to) keep under wraps.
Re: I wondered about this (Score:3)
Definitely make sure you power down your phones and put them in a faraday bag while attending your Resistance meetings. Otherwise they will know who your coconspirators are.
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Sorry. You can't resist. You have no right to make me sick! This should be mandatory.
This guy is a troll. Check his comment history and don't take the bait.
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Because it would cost a lot of battery power, I suspect. You could demand that people carry their phones with them, but if they're draining every hour because you've got every single function running, it doesn't do anyone any good. On top of that, dead phones would be bad for business—a lot of places that might be able to implement that sort of thing run commerce off of the phone. WeChat in China is also a payment platform; if everyone's phone is out of battery, nobody's buying anything. Even in China
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From a pure physics point of view it will be hard to go much better than 100uS for audio time stamping, probably 1ms with consumer grade hardware. Sound don't travel through the air as nice sharp square waves, and if it did you would hear it because of all the lower frequency components that would come in.
Re: I wondered about this (Score:2)
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1. Much heavier then he claims to be.
2. Word salad may come from some sort of random noise generator.
3. Thin margins of election could indicate tampering from AI
4. No close friends.
5. constant churn of inner circle (to avoid detection)
6. appears to be bulletproof
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I think I'd prefer to have the real one [metro.co.uk] in office.
That just sounds like... (Score:4)
That just sounds like the Covid 19 tracing app with fewer steps.
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And to all those who worry an app is tracing them, but still carry a phone that actually is tracing them (and is used by police for that purpose), why are you on a technology site?
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Re: That just sounds like... (Score:2)
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If you don't trust Apple's code it's irrelevant that they are offering a contact-tracing API or service: if they want to hide a tracker they can do so in the OS or firmware. They would not need the excuse of COVID tracing to be able to track everyone.
Re: That just sounds like... (Score:2)
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It basically is.
Regional governments have been slow to develop apps based on the joint API created by Apple and Google, despite how easy it is to use and how well it respects privacy. Some have acknowledged being slow to adopt it because of how well it protects privacy, some lack the resources to develop apps easily, and others simply refuse to believe that there's a need for something like this at all.
We can't fix creepy government surveillance or politicians with their heads screwed on backwards, but for
Re: That just sounds like... (Score:1)
apple healthcare 30% profit and 30% copays (Score:2)
apple healthcare 30% profit and 30% copays
Pine phone it is! (Score:1)
Re:Pine phone it is! (Score:5, Informative)
Re: Pine phone it is! (Score:2)
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Actually my cousin died because of the shutdown. They postponed a tumor removal procedure for her (to save beds for COVID patients). They figured it wasn't critical. It was. She was 46.
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No, it's not a hoax, but the survival rate is 98.54%.
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For comparison, the survival rate of flu viruses is at least 99.8%.
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No, it's not a hoax, but the survival rate is 98.54%.
Are you using some bullshit math from a Facebook meme which included people who haven't caught the virus, to fudge the numbers? You could make contact with live overhead electrical wires seem relatively safe too, using the same bullshit logic, since most people have enough sense to stay away from them.
Mortality rate for a disease is calculated by dividing the number of deaths by the number of cases, and for Covid-19 in the USA it's approximately 3%. Yes, your actual survival rate will vary. Elderly morbi
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I've taken no precautions whatsoever (and I won't wear a mask period) - I know several people who had it. They all said it was nothing more than a bad cold, like the flu. I've never worried about the flu before (even though I'm up there in years) - why would I worry about this? If I get sick there is a 99% chance I get better.
I have better odds of getting shmooshed in a traffic accident or dying by Miami gun fire or even a lightning strike than I do fr
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So I guess if I don't want to deal with what I consider to be a hoax
A hoax that the entire world happens to be in on, to what end? You can't truly believe the world leaders just all sat down together and agreed to stage a pandemic for the lulz.
Bluetooth kills my battery (Score:1)
Still, I'm pretty sure that by the end of next year these apps will be mandatory. Nobody's gonna care about your privacy with the amount of money (and I suppose lives too...) on the line.
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Contact tracing uses the Bluetooth Low Energy [wikipedia.org] standard which has dramatically lower battery consumption than standard Bluetooth.
This is a good idea (Score:1)
Re: This is a good idea (Score:1)
The Virus Is What They Want (Score:1, Insightful)
"invited to opt in" for now (Score:3, Insightful)
Then it's invited to 'opt out'
Then it's opt-in or your health provider jacks up your rates.
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Then it's opt-in or your health provider jacks up your rates.
Only in the U.S. In the rest of the civilized world, they have universal healthcare.
Oh, and the metric system too.
Re: "invited to opt in" for now (Score:2)
Is this PACT-based? (Score:1)
This sounds kinda like the PACT [mit.edu] thing cooked up by Ron Rivest of RSA, Dan Weitzner of EFF and CDT, and some other folks. I know their idea had been pitched to Apple and Google, but I never heard a peep officially about whether or not what's been implemented has made any use of it.
Re: Is this PACT-based? (Score:1)
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Won't Update iOS (Score:1)
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People are dying. It is your duty to update your device. Don't be selfish.
I'm not sure if you're being sarcastic or not. If you are, sorry for ruining the satire. ...but in the event you're not, then you're way off base.
I pay my cell phone bill. If everyone else wants my data, everyone else can pay my cell bill. If it's selfish of me to expect my cell bill paid for (and a new phone while I'm at it, because why not), then it's selfish of me to assume anyone else is entitled to my location data.
More to the point, I can't see how the contact tracing apps solve anything in a way that
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If you want my location data, get a court order. My phone will tell you that I haven't left the North Pole for years.
And you're another dumb poster who doesn't understand how contract tracing apps work. Hint: it doesn't care about your location data at all, and it doesn't share your location data with anyone. Look it up.
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This Coronovirus is inconvient! (Score:2)
Uhmm... (Score:2)