Don’t say people (including me) didn’t warn you.
— Claire G. Coleman (@clairegcoleman) November 24, 2020
COVIDSafe data 'incidentally' collected by intelligence agencies in first six months https://t.co/xcybcyRnmv
COVIDSafe app data was "incidentally" collected by intelligence agencies. The Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security (IGIS) has found no evidence to suggest that any of the data was decrypted, accessed or used; the data is expected to be deleted. https://t.co/SnpcumuAM4
— Digital Rights Watch (@DRWaus) November 24, 2020
In #Singapore, where TraceTogether is set to become mandatory by the end of the year, I don’t even think there is a requirement for the government to publish such reports about data collection, management, and use. So we wouldn’t even know ?????? https://t.co/qzYPw5u5Sm
— Kirsten Han 韩俐颖 (@kixes) November 24, 2020
One or more of Australia’s key intelligence and security agencies “incidentally” collected data relating to the COVIDSafe contact tracing app in its first six months of operation. https://t.co/fHEOIJUCka
— Adam Levin (@Adam_K_Levin) November 24, 2020
The NCSDS (COVIDapp data store) server source code should be released - it is a major gap in transparency. The IGIS report is also worth reading: https://t.co/vAH4K28gmd A 6-monthly report by the Privacy Commissioner on COVIDSafe Act breaches is due @apf_oz @Katharine_Kemp @OAIC https://t.co/ihTacRhzRT
— Graham Greenleaf (@grahamgreenleaf) November 24, 2020
Tell me how it happened that Scott Morrison & Co developed a $5M COVIDsafe app which allowed intelligence agencies to collect data on ppl who had downloaded this app while at same time the app was virtually useless in viral infection contact & tracing? https://t.co/RT2eugiQcY
— no_filter_Yamba (@no_filter_Yamba) November 24, 2020
"Australia’s intelligence agencies have been caught “incidentally” collecting data from the country’s COVIDSafe contact tracing app during the first six months of its launch, a government watchdog has found"https://t.co/wE8bOcUJNQ
— Fabio Chiusi (@fabiochiusi) November 24, 2020
This is pretty much the reason why so many people aren't using a COVID-19 contact tracing app, and Australia just went and fucking did it.https://t.co/h8pYEgoM5d
— Zack Whittaker (@zackwhittaker) November 24, 2020
One or more of Australia’s key intelligence and security agencies “incidentally” collected data relating to the COVIDSafe contact tracing app in its first six months of operation. https://t.co/fHEOIJUCka
— Adam Levin (@Adam_K_Levin) November 24, 2020
COVIDSafe app data was "incidentally" collected by intelligence agencies. The Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security (IGIS) has found no evidence to suggest that any of the data was decrypted, accessed or used; the data is expected to be deleted. https://t.co/SnpcumuAM4
— Digital Rights Watch (@DRWaus) November 24, 2020
COVIDSafe data 'incidentally' collected by intelligence agencies in first six months https://t.co/zcPpyjHHTO
— Asher Wolf (@Asher_Wolf) November 24, 2020
Let he who has not ingested vast quantities of data with his nationwide panopticon throw the first stone https://t.co/uglf2bdyxh pic.twitter.com/i99oFlyR9s
— henno (@jrhennessy) November 24, 2020
*coffee-spit*
— ᴉpᴉǝH ?? (@summer__heidi) November 24, 2020
"One or more of Australia’s key intelligence and security agencies “incidentally” collected data relating to the COVIDSafe contact tracing app in its first six months of operation."https://t.co/vt9b5DpRHn
Australia’s spy agencies caught collecting COVID-19 app data | TechCrunch https://t.co/gQmx4bYXQ0
— PrivacyDigest (@PrivacyDigest) November 25, 2020
Australia’s spy agencies caught collecting COVID-19 app data - https://t.co/mDWVcWxIsZ total accident, I'm sure...
— Glyn Moody (@glynmoody) November 24, 2020