Delineating privacy aspects of COVID tracing applications embedded with proximity measurement technologies & digital technologies

As the COVID-19 pandemic expanded over the globe, governments implemented a series of technological measures to prevent the disease's spread. The development of the COVID Tracing Application (CTA) was one of these measures. In this study, we employed bibliometric and topic-based content analysi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Technology in society 2022-05, Vol.69, p.101968-101968, Article 101968
Hauptverfasser: Saheb, Tahereh, Sabour, Elham, Qanbary, Fatimah, Saheb, Tayebeh
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:As the COVID-19 pandemic expanded over the globe, governments implemented a series of technological measures to prevent the disease's spread. The development of the COVID Tracing Application (CTA) was one of these measures. In this study, we employed bibliometric and topic-based content analysis to determine the most significant entities and research topics. Additionally, we identified significant privacy concerns posed by CTAs, which gather, store, and analyze data in partnership with large technology corporations using proximity measurement technologies, artificial intelligence, and blockchain. We examined a series of key privacy threats identified in our study. These privacy risks include anti-democratic and discriminatory behaviors, politicization of care, derogation of human rights, techno governance, citizen distrust and refusal to adopt, citizen surveillance, and mandatory legislation of the apps' installation. Finally, sixteen research gaps were identified. Then, based on the identified theoretical gaps, we recommended fourteen prospective study strands. Theoretically, this study contributes to the growing body of knowledge about the privacy of mobile health applications that are embedded with cutting-edge technologies and are employed during global pandemics. •We combined bibliometrics and content analysis.•Influential entities such as authors and countries were identified.•We examined the seven key privacy threats identified in our study•Sixteen research gaps were identified•We recommended fourteen prospective study strands
ISSN:0160-791X
1879-3274
0160-791X
DOI:10.1016/j.techsoc.2022.101968