Germany has launched a coronavirus tracing app that officials say is so secure even government ministers can use it, though developers acknowledge it isn’t perfect yet.

A person holds a smartphone with the official 'Corona Warn-App' (Corona Warning Application) in Berlin, Germany, June 15. — AP
A person holds a smartphone with the official 'Corona Warn-App' (Corona Warning Application) in Berlin, Germany, June 15. — AP

Smartphone apps have been touted as a high-tech tool in the effort to track down potential Covid-19 infections.

But governments in Europe have run into legal and cultural hurdles trying to reconcile the need for effective tracing with the continent’s strict data privacy standards.

Germany, where a person’s right to their own data even after death is rooted in the constitution, has proved a particular challenge.

“Tracking where a person is in real time, that does remind us of China and its surveillance system,” said Frederick Richter, who heads the independent Foundation for Data Protection.

Read the full AP story here.

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