Privacy in Times of COVID-19: A Pilot Study in the Republic of Ireland

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Abstract

Contact tracing apps used in tracing and mitigating the spread of COVID-19 have sparked discussions and controversies worldwide with major concerns around privacy. COVID Tracker app used in the Republic of Ireland was praised in general for the way it addressed privacy and was used as baseline for other contact tracing apps worldwide. The success of the app is dependent on the general public uptake, hence their voice and attitude is the one that really matters. This paper focuses on developing a survey and the methods aiming to examine the attitudes toward privacy during COVID-19 of the general public in the Republic of Ireland and their impact on the uptake of the COVID tracker app. Various privacy models are used and health belief model as well in this purpose. A pilot study with 286 participants show a change in attitude towards privacy during COVID-19 pandemic, with more people willing to share their data in the interest of saving lives. However, privacy attitudes are shown to have impacted the adoption of the app in Ireland.

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APA

Xie, G., Lohar, P., Florea, C., Bendechache, M., Trestian, R., Brennan, R., … Tal, I. (2021). Privacy in Times of COVID-19: A Pilot Study in the Republic of Ireland. In ACM International Conference Proceeding Series. Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3465481.3470096

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