Litcius/Paper detail

Our digital footprint under Covid-19: should we fear the UK digital contact tracing app?

Audrey Guinchard

2020International Review of Law Computers & Technology45 citationsDOI

Abstract

With the objective of controlling the spread of the coronavirus, the UK has decided to create and, since 5 May 2020, is live testing a digital contact tracing app, under the direction of NHS X, a branch of NHS Digital, and with the help of the private sector. Given the lack of details as to what the app will exactly do or not do, there are fears that the project will increase government surveillance beyond the pandemic. While I share these concerns, I argue that we need to simultaneously tackle one of the most significant, yet overlooked, contributors to the problem of government surveillance: our inflated digital footprint, stemming from our use of digital technology, and the basis of ‘surveillance capitalism’, a business model left largely unchallenged, which results in surveillance, and stems from the non-compliance with data protection laws. A systematic enforcement of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) on the private sector would disrupt the current dynamics of surveillance which are hidden in plain sight.

Topics & Concepts

Contact tracingCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)EnforcementGovernment (linguistics)TracingBusinessInternet privacySmartphone appComputer scienceComputer securityPolitical scienceLawMedicinePhilosophyPathologyLinguisticsInfectious disease (medical specialty)Operating systemDiseaseCOVID-19 Digital Contact Tracing