The apparent misuse of the data has been criticized by privacy advocates, who fear that such sensitive information will be used for non-pandemic-control purposes. The incident is also likely to provide fodder for vaccine doubters, some of whom have taken on a broader anti-government stance, and those who believe coronavirus-related conspiracy theories.
Luca is subject to Germanyâs strict data-protection regulations and, by law, information from the app cannot be accessed by non-health authorities and used in criminal prosecutions. The app stores the userâs personal details and uses QR codes to record how long theyâve spent at a location. The information is encrypted to obscure any personal information, according to Culture4life, the company that developed the app, and can only be decrypted by health authorities if someone at a venue is infected.
Culture4life said it received requests from law enforcement for data from Luca âalmost every dayâ and that it always declined because it did not have the ability to access tracing information. âIn this case, the health department probably simulated an infection under pressure or requests from the police and obtained the consent of the company [the restaurant] to provide the data,â the organization said.
Mainz police did not immediately return a request for comment.
There has been public resistance in Europe against the use of such apps, especially in Germany and Austria, where memories of authoritarian-government excesses from the past century linger. Experts say the uptake of tracing apps has been slow in virtually all countries where such apps have been promoted, including in the United States, partly because of privacy concerns.
Several lawmakers condemned the latest incident, warning it could undermine efforts to track infections.
âWe must not allow faith in digital apps, which are an important tool in the fight against covid-19, to disappear,â Konstantin von Notz, a lawmaker for the German Greens, told the Handelsblatt newspaper.
In places such as South Korea, Israel and China, digital surveillance has been used aggressively during the pandemic to follow citizensâ movements and identify those who may have been exposed to the virus. European governments, on the other hand, have sought to be global standard-bearers in their commitment to privacy protections.
The Germany case isnât the first time authorities have used data obtained from coronavirus tracing apps in criminal investigations.
Officials in Singapore â where privacy laws are much less strict â last year conceded they had used data from the countryâs TraceTogether app in a homicide investigation. While the use of apps such as Luca is generally voluntary in Europe, TraceTogether is required in Singapore to gain access to many restaurants and office buildings.
Facing a backlash, Singaporean authorities updated the privacy statement on the app, and later amended legislation to make it clear that the data could be used in a serious criminal investigation. The Southeast Asian stateâs government has promised to stop use of the app once the pandemic ebbs.
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