- 시스템, 임의 숫자의 블루투스 '정보'(chirps)를 근처 폰들로 보냄
— Wan Ki Choi (@wkchoi) April 9, 2020
- 코로나19 양성 확진자, 지난 14일간 수신된 '정보'를 모두 업로드해 그가 가까이 있었던 사람들 확인하게 해
- 만일 번호들이 일치하면 통행인들, 접촉 가능성과 다음에 수행해야 할 일에 대한 알림 받아https://t.co/4eddss0v38
I spent the last few days digging into the cryptography systems that might prevent smartphone-based Covid-19 contact-tracing from becoming a surveillance nightmare. This is a thing cryptography can do! But it's complicated. https://t.co/G0vOUIlcMl
— Andy Greenberg (@a_greenberg) April 8, 2020
Clever Cryptography Could Protect Privacy in Covid-19 Contact-Tracing Apps https://t.co/aKOL9RVgvO #hacking #cybersecurity
— Ivy League Content (@ivyleaguewriter) April 9, 2020
Researchers are racing to achieve the benefits of location-tracking without the surveillance https://t.co/v2KUu7zleY via @WIRED cc @LawMcGill #COVID19
— McGill University (@mcgillu) April 8, 2020
Could contact tracing apps actually use location data without infringing on privacy and creating a dystopian surveillance nightmare? Yes! But it’s complicated. @a_greenberg 4/https://t.co/maMrUzopuO
— nxthompson (@nxthompson) April 8, 2020
This is likely to become important in Ireland in the next few days as a new contact tracing app is rolled out. "Clever Cryptography Could Protect Privacy in Covid-19 Contact-Tracing Apps | WIRED." https://t.co/06YeHIKdFb
— Rory Byrne (@roryireland) April 8, 2020
“...teams of cryptographers have been racing to do the seemingly impossible: Enable contact-tracing systems without mass surveillance, building apps that notify potentially exposed users without handing over location data to the government.” https://t.co/ru3pinwJ5t
— All I don't wanna do is zoom-a-zoom-zoom-zoom (@hypervisible) April 8, 2020
Using tech to trace #covid19 while preserving some privacy. Still, tracing offers little value w/o broad testing, making surveillance pointless & thus, it’s privacy compromises unjustified. But w/ tests, something like this approach may strike a balance. https://t.co/XRDAx76UZ9
— Ari Ezra Waldman (@ariezrawaldman) April 9, 2020
Super cool. Would this be rough on the battery? https://t.co/xZoy01We1m
— Joseph Majkut (@JosephMajkut) April 9, 2020
A new system can trace the recent encounters of Covid-19 patients while preserving privacy for all parties. It uses smartphones’ short-range Bluetooth “chirps,” matched anonymously between patients and those they’ve been near in recent days. https://t.co/tt18twvFcq pic.twitter.com/5tv38FBTBj
— Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) (@MIT) April 9, 2020
BREAKING: MIT system uses Bluetooth signals for Covid-19 contact tracing - while preserving privacyhttps://t.co/qerf759BYo pic.twitter.com/fRV104DIkL
— MIT CSAIL (@MIT_CSAIL) April 9, 2020
Can a coronavirus tracking app be both effective and privacy-centric? https://t.co/FpJl0aoLDm @IrmaRaste @eViRaHealth #COVID19 #Covid_19 #coronavirus #coronapocolypse #StayAtHome #DigitalHealth #privacy
— Evan Kirstel #StayHome #RemoteWork (@evankirstel) April 10, 2020
Can a coronavirus tracking app be both effective and privacy-centric?
— So-Star (@SoStarMusic) April 9, 2020
On Monday the EU data protection watchdog called for the development of a single #COVIDー19 contact-tracing app that would be coordinated at European level.#CoronavirusOutbreak #App https://t.co/8snVPpNBlB
.@PrivacyPros MIT develops privacy-preserving COVID-19 contact tracing inspired by Apple's 'Find My' feature #privacy https://t.co/vqZHAQjUTu via @techcrunch
— Paul Jordan (@pjordan_10) April 10, 2020
Update. #MIT develops privacy-preserving COVID-19 contact tracing inspired by Apple's 'Find My' feature https://t.co/3Ez8ewRUoi via @techcrunch #tech #digital #data #business pic.twitter.com/0eDbePUFxx
— Kohei Kurihara -DataPrivacy for Fighting Covid-19- (@kuriharan) April 10, 2020