Three Boston University computer scientists and engineers are working
on a smartphone app that could let people know if they have come in
contact with someone who has tested positive for COVID-19, while
protecting the privacy of all parties.
Ran Canetti, Ari Trachtenberg, and Mayank Varia have teamed up with
researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and other
universities to develop an app that uses Bluetooth-enabled cell phones
to notify a person if they have come into close proximity with someone
infected with SARS-CoV-2, the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 and
has been officially detected in more than 2 million people worldwide.
To work best, the app requires many people to use it, whether they
have had COVID-19 or not. The app transmits and captures random
Bluetooth signals via nearby cell phones that also have the app
installed. App users who have been diagnosed with COVID-19 voluntarily
and anonymously report their positive results, which then causes their
Bluetooth pings from the last 14 days to be uploaded to a database
that’s coded to ensure that the diagnosed user is uploading their own
pings. From there, those signals are compared with pings of other app
participants in the system. The app then alerts users of possible
proximity to an infected person, and subsequently directs them to follow
up with health officials (or their doctor). All of the uploaded
information is verified by a public health agency, and all apps must be
installed by users voluntarily.
For Canetti, Trachtenberg, and Varia, the main concern of the
technology is the preservation of privacy. “The question of privacy
originally came up in a discussion on the mailing list of the BU Hariri
Institute’s Cyber Security, Law, and Society Alliance,” says
Trachtenberg, a professor of electrical and computer engineering. “I
proposed a [prototypic] approach to privacy-aware contact tracing, and
Ran, Mayank, and I fleshed out the approach in a paper that we posted to
arXiv on March 27.”
The arXiv paper attracted a great deal of attention, and the BU team soon joined the PACT (Private Automated Contact Tracing) team, which is led by Ron Rivest, an MIT professor and the inventor of several highly regarded encryption algorithms.
“PACT was started in response to COVID-19,” says Varia. “This is just
one small piece of the COVID-19 puzzle; there exist an immense number
of healthcare issues and also many technological ones that PACT does
nothing to address. On the other hand, this technology can be useful
beyond the current epidemic since we [plan to] have this capability
ready to go in advance of the next epidemic—which hopefully won’t be for
a long time.”
PACT also includes scientists from Massachusetts General Hospital,
the Weizmann Institute of Science, Brown University, Carnegie Mellon
University, and the MIT Lincoln Laboratory. The researchers say key
elements in the PACT protocol are taken from the original design
proposed by the team of BU engineers. Apple and Google recently put
forth a very similar protocol in their own contact tracing app.
“Typically, an effort like this would be done over years, with
publication and peer-review, but we just don’t have the time for the
formal academic mechanism,” says Trachtenberg. “The broad PACT
collaboration serves as an excellent substitute in this time of need.
It’s essential that this system be put together at breakneck speed.”
Varia, codirector of BU’s Center for Reliable Information Systems and
Cyber Security (RISCS) and research associate professor in computer
science, emphasizes that the app does not transmit any personal
information, or even a unique identifier for a phone.
“To protect everyone’s privacy, we are only sending random ‘garbage’
within each Bluetooth packet,” he says. “We call these random numbers
‘chirps.’ People who are diagnosed with COVID-19 voluntarily post only
these random chirps to a public database, which permits anyone who has
come into contact with the diagnosed person to check (locally on their
own phone) whether any of the chirps they have [encountered] match the
entries in the public database.”
Canetti, director of the RISCS and professor of computer science,
says the technology demonstrates how automatic contact tracing can be
done on a phone-to-phone basis and without a centralized opaque database
that holds location information on all individuals.
“That’s important,” he says, “because it counters the prevailing
perception that mitigating the pandemic via automatic contact tracing
mandates large-scale, government-led violation of privacy of all or most
of the population.”
https://techxplore.com/news/2020-04-contact-app-covid-exposure-privacy.html
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