What you need to know
- Apple has blocked an NHS contact tracing app update because it breaks a privacy rule.
- The contact tracing API the app uses prevents location data from being used but that didn't stop the app from trying to do it.
The rule has been there since day one.
Apple has reportedly blocked an update to the NHS contact tracing app used by users in England and Wales after it was discovered to be trying to use location data in a way that is expressly forbidden.
According to a new BBC report, the app update intended to have users upload their location check-ins if they were discovered to have contracted COVID-19. The idea was that users would then be contacted if they had checked in to the same location at the same time. But that use of location data is prohibited under Apple – and Google's – terms.
The plan had been to ask users to upload logs of venue check-ins - carried out via poster barcode scans - if they tested positive for the virus. This could be used to warn others.
The update had been timed to coincide with the relaxation of lockdown rules.
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Under the terms that all health authorities signed up to in order to use Apple and Google's privacy-centric contact-tracing tech, they had to agree not to collect any location data via the software.
Apple has now prevented the app update from being made available via the App Store with the Department of Health now left to undo its mistake.
This is just the latest in a long line of issues the England and Wales NHS contact tracing app has had since even before it launched. Unfortunately, ut's unlikely to be the last.
Issues aside, those in England and Wales can download the NHS COVID-19 app from the App Store now.
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