This is all great news. Shows hw important it was for Apple and Google to detail their plans early, take feedback and adjust. @russellbrandom had the detailshttps://t.co/3BX1oZdgxy
— Dieter Bohn (@backlon) April 24, 2020
New: Apple and Google have tweaked their Bluetooth-based contact-tracing technology as they near mid-May launch. https://t.co/i8kV4EZHZQ
— Ina Fried (@inafried) April 24, 2020
I just had a good exchange with #Apple CEO @tim_cook on the need to ensure that contact tracing apps are fully:
— Thierry Breton (@ThierryBreton) April 22, 2020
✔️anonymised
✔️voluntary
✔️transparent
✔️temporary
✔️secured
and interoperable across operating systems and borders.#Deconfinement apps must respect our #privacy. pic.twitter.com/VrnUXOsrat
Apple & Google’s new #COVID19 contact tracking technology will be released to developers April 28th, weeks before initially promised. It will be inline with EU privacy laws, by being anonymous, voluntary, transparent, temporary, secure & interoperable. https://t.co/KdWfmx53j3 pic.twitter.com/2MAHvnMZRN
— @RobertLufkinMD (@robertlufkinmd) April 23, 2020
the critical change in today's Apple/Google news is a rebrand of sorts to call it exposure notification because (controversially) public health officials can't use it for traditional contact tracing https://t.co/0b1mNnEgnK
— Tony Romm (@TonyRomm) April 24, 2020
An unusually positive big corp for good story this one. Apple and Google being very thoughtful about privacy. Here’s hoping this is the start of things to come in mega corp land. https://t.co/4Lqlc11uEr
— Dominic Campbell (@dominiccampbell) April 24, 2020
Apple and Google want to make it as easy as possible for health officials to build their own apps for this project. That includes supporting a potential white-label app to speed things up.
— Ian Sherr (@iansherr) April 24, 2020
Tip @Techmeme https://t.co/5DYTnV2nQU
apple and google are now calling their project an “exposure notification” system, rather than a contact tracing system https://t.co/AP27Cw7fwG
— Nicole Wetsman (@NicoleWetsman) April 24, 2020
Fascinating. Germany may justify a centralised app on grounds of data sovereignty over Gapple and need to collect > min data - and these may also inform @NHSX - but Ge app still adheres to no contact without positive test.1/2 https://t.co/NxFvFYvtae
— Lilian Edwards (@lilianedwards) April 23, 2020
Apple and Google have updated their coronavirus contact tracing technology to try to address privacy concerns (and to make it easier for health authorities to write apps): https://t.co/gIAoJZF3HB from @iansherr
— Stephen Shankland (@stshank) April 24, 2020
Apple, Google Boost Privacy Protections for Contact-Tracing Tool https://t.co/NJwp6bmeix https://t.co/8hegBZrQig
— Mark Gurman (@markgurman) April 24, 2020
Meanwhile Germany pushing ahead with centralised approach https://t.co/4PRg8qQ3Hw
— Natasha ?♀️ (@riptari) April 23, 2020
This is the single most important tech development in these times. Pakistan must officially build an application for citizens using this, for effective contact tracing ...
— Umar Saif (@umarsaif) April 24, 2020
P.S. it’s an opt-in app, you still control your privacy. https://t.co/3IYWNn7wH6
Apple and Google pledge to shut down coronavirus tracker when pandemic ends https://t.co/74PivGCQjZ pic.twitter.com/Rsm1C1X3th
— The Verge (@verge) April 24, 2020
Apple and Google pledge to shut down coronavirus tracker when pandemic ends https://t.co/kDXnHahcOT pic.twitter.com/OhEoHMLHrY
— Geeman Yip (@GeemanYip) April 24, 2020
apple and google are now calling their project an “exposure notification” system, rather than a contact tracing system https://t.co/AP27Cw7fwG
— Nicole Wetsman (@NicoleWetsman) April 24, 2020
Seriously, we will shut it down. Honest. Uh-huh.
— Sharon K. Gilbert (@sharonkgilbert) April 24, 2020
Apple and Google pledge to shut down coronavirus tracker when pandemic ends - The Verge https://t.co/LBcR3IHSrB
"Apple and Google spokespeople, as well as privacy advocates, insist that high levels of user trust are needed for a voluntary app approach to succeed." https://t.co/zXFyuoi6uH
— Emil Protalinski (@EPro) April 24, 2020
Apple and Google build more privacy and flexibility into Bluetooth contact tracing tech https://t.co/qtCPJJWSYV by @kharijohnson
— Geeman Yip (@GeemanYip) April 24, 2020
Apple and Google have revealed more details of the API they are jointly developing to enable public health system developers to create contact tracing type apps, which will now be known as "exposure notification"https://t.co/3oZq0Qhtmo
— COVID Perspective (@covidperspectiv) April 24, 2020
As a result of feedback from officials around the world, Apple and Google today have disclosed a series of changes to their upcoming COVID-19 contract tracing initiative, with a focus on even stronger privacy protections and accuracy.https://t.co/lnwH4YtS5n
— Joe Rossignol (@rsgnl) April 24, 2020
Apple and Google announced a series of small changes to their coronavirus contact-tracing technology and shared additional technical details ahead of a launch in the coming weeks.https://t.co/fC6LD77trF
— Axios (@axios) April 24, 2020
Apple and Google’s new contact tracing tool is almost ready. Just don’t call it a contact tracing tool. https://t.co/uv5kaHj7Tc
— Vox (@voxdotcom) April 24, 2020
Apple and Google’s new contact tracing tool is almost ready. Just don’t call it a contact tracing tool. https://t.co/bbhftpInwA
— Recode (@Recode) April 24, 2020
Apple과 Google은 유행성이 종료한 때 코로나 바이러스 추적 시스템을 종료할 것을 약속합니다 https://t.co/HRdgRgwqd1
— lunamoth (@lunamoth) April 25, 2020
Apple and Google pledge to shut down coronavirus tracker when pandemic ends https://t.co/uLNEqqpJeu pic.twitter.com/TEaDCAWt1n
— The Verge (@verge) April 25, 2020
It’s now called the “exposure notification system.” Which “...reflects that the new system should be ‘in service of broader contact tracing efforts by public health authorities.’” https://t.co/VZaFG0qpWw
— All I don't wanna do is zoom-a-zoom-zoom-zoom (@hypervisible) April 25, 2020
the critical change in today's Apple/Google news is a rebrand of sorts to call it exposure notification because (controversially) public health officials can't use it for traditional contact tracing https://t.co/0b1mNnEgnK
— Tony Romm (@TonyRomm) April 24, 2020
iPhone and Android COVID-19 contact tracing FAQ: What govt. sees, where data is stored, more https://t.co/USXhBhN4Lf
— Daniel W. Seiler (@dws_ch) April 24, 2020