Governments want us to install apps on our mobile devices that would track our movements.
If we do not do so, politicians say, they cannot ‘re-open’ society.
Better idea: nix the stay-at-home orders and entice us to use your Little Brother apps, you intrusive, over-stepping tyrants.
OK. I confess: they are not called Little Brother apps. Declan McCullagh, writing in Reason, calls them “contact tracking apps,” and notes that, while American states consider them, Australia’s and Singapore’s prime ministers are really pushing them.
And are complaining that voluntary adoption has been lackluster.
As for those low adoption rates?
Huzzah!
For a variety of reasons, I will be resisting this new tech.
“Different strains of contact-tracing software are emerging,” explains McCullagh. “All of the more prominent systems rely on a centralized server of some sort, either to perform matching of COVID-positive identifiers or to distribute lists of COVID-positive identifiers for matching locally on your device.” The idea is to notify us when coming close to an infected person.
Further confession: my relationship with computing gadgets being so fraught with … tensions … that such an app would no doubt seem more a Big Bother.
Note the lack of an ‘r.’
It is one thing to offer a new service for our benefit. It is another thing to hold our freedom of movement in hock — install our apps, say these pols, or no return to normalcy!
Bothersome Big Brotherish attacks on our privacy get their biggest boosts from governments.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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