Google Is Tracking People's Movements in Their Communities During Coronavirus(newsweek.com)
newsweek.com
Google Is Tracking People's Movements in Their Communities During Coronavirus
https://www.newsweek.com/google-tracking-peoples-movements-their-communities-during-coronavirus-pandemic-1495915
31 comments
I think a more fair assessment would be: "Google is tracking people's movements"
Yeah, but it's not clickbait-worthy unless it has "corona virus" in the title these days.
Would have been an even better title if they somehow worked Zoom into the title.
“Google Is Tracking People's Movements in Their Communities During Coronavirus although they are mostly working from home using Zoom.”
“Google Is Tracking People's Movements in Their Communities During Coronavirus although they are mostly working from home using Zoom.”
Google is sharing it for this specific situation.
https://www.google.com/covid19/mobility/
That might make a better submission URL. That or the blog post.
https://www.blog.google/technology/health/covid-19-community...
https://www.google.com/covid19/mobility/
That might make a better submission URL. That or the blog post.
https://www.blog.google/technology/health/covid-19-community...
This post is describing https://www.blog.google/technology/health/covid-19-community...
About privacy they say: "For these reports, we use differential privacy, which adds artificial noise to our datasets enabling high quality results without identifying any individual person. The insights are created with aggregated, anonymized sets of data from users who have turned on the Location History setting, which is off by default."
This seems pretty reasonable to me?
(Disclosure: I work for Google)
About privacy they say: "For these reports, we use differential privacy, which adds artificial noise to our datasets enabling high quality results without identifying any individual person. The insights are created with aggregated, anonymized sets of data from users who have turned on the Location History setting, which is off by default."
This seems pretty reasonable to me?
(Disclosure: I work for Google)
Given a pattern of movement it's trivially easy to identify an individual by cross referencing with other cheaply/freely available data sets.
Fortunately this is highly aggregated data without individual movements.
This is built on the normal Google location tracking systems. We both know that while they may be providing aggregate stats now they have all the data they need to provide individual location stats. Because the capability exists there is the temptation to use it, especially if the situation worsens more than expected.
This is simply an aggregate (on country level) on how many people (as change to baseline) have been at what sort of location at what time (with a granularity of days):
* Retail & recreation
* Grocery & pharmacy
* Parks
* Transit stations
* Workplaces
* Residential
It's quite clear that this can be easily derived from the information they have in maps.google.com plus phone movements. It's unlikely that this data presents any privacy concern.
On the other hand it's probably mainly useless with regards to fighting Covid19. As the data is not detailed enough for such a purpose.
Also I think we should point out that releasing this data in PDF form seems to be deliberate to prevent anyone else from providing meaningful insights by adding infographics of their own.
[Edit: Clarification that does not contain number of people but simply difference to baseline]
* Retail & recreation
* Grocery & pharmacy
* Parks
* Transit stations
* Workplaces
* Residential
It's quite clear that this can be easily derived from the information they have in maps.google.com plus phone movements. It's unlikely that this data presents any privacy concern.
On the other hand it's probably mainly useless with regards to fighting Covid19. As the data is not detailed enough for such a purpose.
Also I think we should point out that releasing this data in PDF form seems to be deliberate to prevent anyone else from providing meaningful insights by adding infographics of their own.
[Edit: Clarification that does not contain number of people but simply difference to baseline]
Why is Google not warning people that they have been in contact with potentially infected individuals? Implementing this would probably be trivial for them.
It almost feels like breaking some higher contract with society by reserving that power for advertising and not using it to tackle the pandemic.
It almost feels like breaking some higher contract with society by reserving that power for advertising and not using it to tackle the pandemic.
How would Google reliably know which people had it, so it could warn people they'd been near?
(Disclosure: I work for Google)
(Disclosure: I work for Google)
They don't go outside anymore and search for "when do I have to go to the hospital if i have coronavirus". Or you can just report it.
(Disclaimer: I work on an app that tries to do that. Ideally privacy preserving. And we implemented it using Google Nearby API to detect whether people are close. But that sends all messages over Google servers and that would be a deal breaker for us, but the tech itself would be really cool to have. Let me know if you can help.)
Also Related Work:
Singapore doing this: https://www.tracetogether.gov.sg/
This as hardware: https://estimote.com/wearable/
(Disclaimer: I work on an app that tries to do that. Ideally privacy preserving. And we implemented it using Google Nearby API to detect whether people are close. But that sends all messages over Google servers and that would be a deal breaker for us, but the tech itself would be really cool to have. Let me know if you can help.)
Also Related Work:
Singapore doing this: https://www.tracetogether.gov.sg/
This as hardware: https://estimote.com/wearable/
That has way too many false positives to be worth notifying potential contacts over.
You could have something where people who have it can say "I have it, please let others I was near know" but unless we get testing up dramatically that won't work either.
You could have something where people who have it can say "I have it, please let others I was near know" but unless we get testing up dramatically that won't work either.
Exactly, these are the things to get right. Hard problems but for sure not impossible.
Also, the alternative of total lock down is hard to beat when it comes to false positives. ;)
Also, the alternative of total lock down is hard to beat when it comes to false positives. ;)
A lot of people don't go outside anymore and search for symptoms. Even people who don't normally worry are going to search since it's allergy season, and some symptoms overlap.
(Disclaimer: I work on an app that tries to do that. Ideally privacy preserving. And we implemented it using Google Nearby API to detect whether people are close. But that sends all messages over Google servers and that would be a deal breaker for us, but the tech itself would be really cool to have. Let me know if you can help.)
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How would you verify that people who search for these things actually have the virus? They could be doing preemptive research.
And how would you find a list of such questions without just broadly matching on terms like "coronavirus"? The task seems very complex to me.
And how would you find a list of such questions without just broadly matching on terms like "coronavirus"? The task seems very complex to me.
You're right. Both availability of testing and how much the lock down is relaxed increase the need of this drastically. But those are both things that are likely to increase during the course of the year.
1. Doesn’t work when there’s a general lockdown
2. People could just be searching out of curiosity and heightened awareness
3. Can’t self-report if you can’t get tested
2. People could just be searching out of curiosity and heightened awareness
3. Can’t self-report if you can’t get tested
That would still be a legal minefield, and rightfully so.
Gigablah(1)
Isn't it what they already do anyway?
_red(1)