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Public acceptance of privacy-encroaching policies to address the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom
Stephan Lewandowsky ,
Roles
Conceptualization,
Data curation,
Formal analysis,
Funding acquisition,
Methodology,
Project administration,
Visualization,
Writing – original draft,
Writing – review & editing
Affiliation
University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

Andrew Perfors,
Affiliation
University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

Yoshihisa Kashima,
Affiliation
University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

Joshua P. White,
Affiliation
University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

Daniel R. Little,
Affiliation
University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

Muhsin Yesilada
Public acceptance of privacy-encroaching policies to address the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom
Stephan Lewandowsky, 
Abstract
The nature of the COVID-19 pandemic may require governments to use privacy-encroaching technologies to help contain its spread. One technology involves co-location tracking through mobile Wi-Fi, GPS, and Bluetooth to permit health agencies to monitor people’s contact with each other, thereby triggering targeted social-distancing when a person turns out to be infected. The effectiveness of tracking relies on the willingness of the population to support such privacy encroaching measures. We report the results of two large surveys in the United Kingdom, conducted during the peak of the pandemic, that probe people’s attitudes towards various tracking technologies. The results show that by and large there is widespread acceptance for co-location tracking. Acceptance increases when the measures are explicitly time-limited and come with opt-out clauses or other assurances of privacy. Another possible future technology to control the pandemic involves “immunity passports”, which could be issued to people who carry antibodies for the COVID-19 virus, potentially implying that they are immune and therefore unable to spread the virus to other people. Immunity passports have been considered as a potential future step to manage the pandemic. We probe people’s attitudes towards immunity passports and find considerable support overall, although around 20% of the public strongly oppose passports.

Related Keywords

Germany ,Australia ,Bristol ,City Of ,United Kingdom ,Poland ,Singapore ,British ,Andrew Soundy ,Google ,Care Information Exchange ,Elizabeth Blackwell Institute ,European Union ,Humboldt Foundation ,University Of Birmingham ,University Of Bristol ,Creative Commons Attribution License ,Humboldt Award ,Coronavirus Bill ,Information Commissioner Office ,Google Bluetooth Based ,Immunity ,Covid 19 ,Pandemics ,Psychological Attitudes ,Medical Risk Factors ,Virus Testing ,Apps ,Sunset ,ஜெர்மனி ,ஆஸ்திரேலியா ,பிரிஸ்டல் ,நகரம் ஆஃப் ,ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் ,போல்யாஂட் ,சிங்கப்பூர் ,பிரிட்டிஷ் ,கூகிள் ,பராமரிப்பு தகவல் பரிமாற்றம் ,எலிசபெத் பிளாக்வெல் நிறுவனம் ,ஐரோப்பிய தொழிற்சங்கம் ,ஹம்போல்ட் அடித்தளம் ,பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் பர்மிங்காம் ,பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் பிரிஸ்டல் ,ஹம்போல்ட் விருது ,தகவல் ஆணையர் அலுவலகம் ,கூகிள் புளூடூத் அடிப்படையிலானது ,நோய் எதிர்ப்பு சக்தி ,உளவியல் அணுகுமுறைகளை ,மருத்துவ ஆபத்து காரணிகள் ,வைரஸ் சோதனை ,பயன்பாடுகள் ,சூரிய அஸ்தமனம் ,

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