Contact-tracing is a necessary part of stomping out this virus. If you want to go to a Raptors game, or a Leafs game, or go to the cinema, or eat inside a restaurant, at any time in the foreseeable future, contact-tracing is necessary. If a phone app helps with that ... great.
If you are really concerned about how much your phone, or Apple, or Google, or facebook, etc know about you, throw your smartphone in the garbage and don't replace it. The contact-tracing app is the least of your worries. Your phone already knows your travels. If you pay bills with your phone, it knows what you've bought and where. It ALREADY knows. The extra contact-tracing bit is irrelevant from that perspective. All it does is keep tabs on what other smartphones it has been near, and remember that for a while (a couple of weeks), and flag you if one of those smartphones that your smartphone has been near is tied to someone that tests positive. Supposedly it's doing this with anonymized tags so that the contact isn't actually traceable to an individual's name and address. But we have to trust the software developers that this is how it actually works.
You put faith in software developers every time your phone is switched on. If a malicious software developer wants to broadcast your location without you knowing it, they already can. If you don't allow an app to use your location, how do you know it doesn't when you tell it not to? You don't. If you don't allow an app to access your contact list, how do you know it doesn't? You don't.
Throw away your smartphone if you can't deal with this, and don't replace it.
For the rest of us ... functional contact tracing should bring the date closer when we can go to a Raptors game, or Leafs game, or the cinema, or whatever ... and maybe save some lives in the process.
I ain't worried about the contact-tracing apps.
i'm not a big tech person, but any kind of invasion of my info bothers me. i know there's lots of info that's out of my control but the way company's are going about sucking it out without having consent is the part i don't agree with
lots of maybe in your statement, you saying that we will need to have some kind of tracing to be able to travel or live our lives to what used to be normal might and hopefully will never. happen
Contact-tracing is a necessary part of stomping out this virus. If you want to go to a Raptors game, or a Leafs game, or go to the cinema, or eat inside a restaurant, at any time in the foreseeable future, contact-tracing is necessary. If a phone app helps with that ... great.
If you are really concerned about how much your phone, or Apple, or Google, or facebook, etc know about you, throw your smartphone in the garbage and don't replace it. The contact-tracing app is the least of your worries. Your phone already knows your travels. If you pay bills with your phone, it knows what you've bought and where. It ALREADY knows. The extra contact-tracing bit is irrelevant from that perspective. All it does is keep tabs on what other smartphones it has been near, and remember that for a while (a couple of weeks), and flag you if one of those smartphones that your smartphone has been near is tied to someone that tests positive. Supposedly it's doing this with anonymized tags so that the contact isn't actually traceable to an individual's name and address. But we have to trust the software developers that this is how it actually works.
You put faith in software developers every time your phone is switched on. If a malicious software developer wants to broadcast your location without you knowing it, they already can. If you don't allow an app to use your location, how do you know it doesn't when you tell it not to? You don't. If you don't allow an app to access your contact list, how do you know it doesn't? You don't.
Throw away your smartphone if you can't deal with this, and don't replace it.
For the rest of us ... functional contact tracing should bring the date closer when we can go to a Raptors game, or Leafs game, or the cinema, or whatever ... and maybe save some lives in the process.
I ain't worried about the contact-tracing apps.
If you receive anything for free....you’re the product.Beware of anything free.
i'm not a big tech person, but any kind of invasion of my info bothers me. i know there's lots of info that's out of my control but the way company's are going about sucking it out without having consent is the part i don't agree with
That recently got updated so by default after ~18 months, that history gets purged.The weirdest one for me was Google Timelines. I've had an android phone since 2011 and didn't find out about it until maybe 2 years ago. If you have your location services on Google automatically creates a timeline of everywhere you have been. Little creepy to go back and see what I was doing on XYZ date almost a decade ago now.
There is no phone app preinstalled for it or really any obvious notification Google is doing this in the background. I believe the only way you can open your timeline is on a desktop version of google maps and finding it through the sidebar.