Data privacy during pandemics a scorecard approach for evaluating the privacy implications of COVID-19 mobile phone surveillance programs / Benjamin Boudreaux, Matthew A. DeNardo, Sarah W. Denton, Ricardo Sanchez, Katie Feistel, Hardika Dayalani.
| Author/creator | Boudreaux, Benjamin |
| Format | Electronic |
| Publication Info | Santa Monica, Calif. :bRAND Corporation, [2020] |
| Description | xx, 143 pages : color illustrations, color map ; 26 cm |
| Supplemental Content | Full text available from Ebook Central - Academic Complete |
| Subjects |
| Other author/creator | DeNardo, Matthew A. |
| Other author/creator | Denton, Sarah W. |
| Other author/creator | Sanchez, Ricardo R., 1979- |
| Other author/creator | Feistel, Katie. |
| Other author/creator | Dayalani, Hardika. |
| Other author/creator | Project Air Force (U.S.) |
| Other author/creator | Rand Corporation. |
| Series | [Research report] ; RR-A365-1 Research report (Rand Corporation) ; RR-A365-1. ^A1368548 |
| Abstract | Public health officials around the world are struggling to respond to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. To contain the highly infectious disease, governments have turned to mobile phone surveillance programs to augment traditional public health interventions. These programs have been designed to track COVID-19 symptoms, map population movement, trace the contacts of infected persons, enforce quarantine orders, and authorize movement through health passes. Although these programs enable more-robust public health interventions, they also raise concerns that the privacy and civil liberties of users will be violated. In this report, the authors evaluate the short- and long-term privacy harms associated with the use of these programs-including political, economic, and social harms. They consider whether two potentially competing goals can be achieved concurrently: (1) the use of mobile phones as public health surveillance tools to help manage COVID-19 and future public health crises, and (2) the protection of privacy and civil liberties. To evaluate the privacy implications of COVID-19 mobile surveillance programs, the authors create a concise, transparent, and standardized privacy scorecard. They use this scorecard approach to evaluate 40 mobile phone surveillance programs from around the world. The results indicate that the privacy implications vary considerably across programs, even within programs designed to accomplish similar public health goals. The authors offer recommendations to U.S. federal, state, and local officials to implement COVID-19 surveillance programs that better protect privacy, especially that of vulnerable and marginalized communities.-- Source other than the Library of Congress. |
| Bibliography note | Includes bibliographical references (pages 121-142). |
| Access restriction | Available only to authorized users. |
| Other forms | Also available on the internet via WWW in PDF format. |
| Technical details | Mode of access: World Wide Web |
| Title history note | See also RAND/RB-A365-1. |
| Genre/form | Electronic books. |
| LCCN | 2020277701 |
| ISBN | 9781977405630 paperback |
| ISBN | 1977405630 paperback |
| Standard identifier# | 10.7249/RRA365-1 |
| Technical rpt# | RAND/RR-A365-1 |
| Stock number | $49.00 |