I’d prefer an ankle tag over a quarantine app

There are much cheaper options

Location tracking and facial recognition

Despite the SA Premier’s claims, this isn’t the first such app to be used in Australia. A similarhome-quarantine appis already in use for arrivals into WA, andin some cases the Northern Territory.

Both apps use geolocation and facial recognition software to track and identify those in quarantine. Users are required to prove they are at home when randomly prompted by the application.

In SA, you have 15 minutes to get the face recognition software to verify you’re still at home. In WA, it is more of a race. You have just 5 minutes before you risk a knock on the door from the police.

Another difference is that the SA app is opt-in. Currently. The WA app is already mandatory for arrivals from high risk areas like Victoria. For extreme risk areas like NSW, it’s straight into a quarantine hotel.

Reasons for concern

But why are we developing such home-quarantine apps in the first place, when we already have a cheap technology to do this? If we want to monitor that people are at home (and that’s a bigif), wouldn’t one of the ankle tags already used by our corrective services for home detention be much simpler, safer, and more robust?

There are many reasons to be concerned about home-quarantine apps.

First, they’ll likely be much easier to hack than ankle tags. How many of us have hacked geo-blocks to access Netflix in the US, or to watch other digital content from another country?Faking GPS location on a smartphoneis not much more difficult.

Second, facial recognition software is often flawed and is frequently biased against people of color and against women. The documentaryCoded Biasdoes a great job unpicking these biases.

Despite years of effort, even the big tech giants like Google and Amazon have beenunable to eliminate these biases from their software. I have little hope the SA government or the WA company GenVis, the developers of the two Australian home-quarantine apps, will have done better.

Indeed, the Australian Human Rights Commission has called fora moratorium on the use of facial recognition softwarein high-risk settings such as policing until better regulation is in place to protect human rights and privacy.

Third, there needs to be a much more detailed and public debate around issues like privacy, and safeguards put in place based on this discussion, in advance of the technology being used.

With COVID check-in apps, we were promised the data would only be used for public health purposes. But police forces around Australia haveaccessed this information for other ends on at least six occasions. This severely undermines the public’s confidence and use of such apps.

Before it was launched, the Commonwealth’s COVIDSafe app had legislative prohibitions put in place on the use of the data collected for anything but contact tracing. This perhaps gave us a false sense of security as the state-produced COVID check-in apps did not have any such legal safeguards. Only some states have retrospectively introduced legislation to provide such protections.

Fourth, we have to worry about how software like this legitimizes technologies like facial recognition that ultimately erode fundamental rights such as the right to privacy.

If home-quarantine apps work successfully, will they open the door to facial recognition being used in other settings? To identify shoplifters? To provide access to welfare? Or to healthcare? What Orwellian world will this take us to?

The perils of facial recognition

In China, we have already seenfacial recognition software used to monitor and persecute the Uighur minority. In the US, at least three Black people have already wrongly ended up in jail due tofacial recognition errors.

Facial recognition is a technology that is dangerous if it doesn’t work (as is often the case). And dangerous if it does. It changes the speed, scale and cost of surveillance.

With facial recognition software behind the CCTV cameras found on many street corners, you can be tracked 24/7. You are no longer anonymous when you go out to the shops. Or when you protest about Black lives mattering or the climate emergency.

High technology is not the solution

High tech software like facial recognition isn’t a fix for the problems that have plagued Australia’s response to the pandemic. It can’t remedy the failure to buy enough vaccines, the failure to build dedicated quarantine facilities, or the in-fighting and point-scoring between states and with the Commonwealth.

I never thought I’d say this but, all in all, I think I’d prefer an ankle tag. And if the image of the ankle tag seems too unsettling for you, we could do what Hong Kong has done andmake it a wristband.

Article byToby Walsh, Professor of AI at UNSW, Research Group Leader,UNSW

This article is republished fromThe Conversationunder a Creative Commons license. Read theoriginal article.

Story byThe Conversation

An independent news and commentary website produced by academics and journalists.An independent news and commentary website produced by academics and journalists.

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