Today Apple released iOS 13.5. I can’t help but think of this as the pandemic release with several Covid-19 related changes and features:
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If the phone detects you are wearing a face mask, it will go straight to passcode entry.
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FaceTime now has the option to turn off those floating panels. How much you want to bet there where a bunch of Apple Executives working from home in the last two months saying, “what the hell is this?”
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It’s also now easier to share your data with emergency services.
The Exposure Notification API
I’ve written a lot over the years about government intrusion on user privacy and my general preference that we be allowed to keep our device information private. So when I first heard about this feature, I was skeptical.
Since then, I’ve read the Apple/Google documentation and studied this new feature in greater detail. I’ve also watched the mounting global death toll as a result of this horrible disease.
I fully support the exposure notification API.
Apple and Google created this collaboratively. Because the companies have such different views on user data, I think this was a good thing.
As implemented, your phone will act as a Bluetooth beacon and generate a random identifier. It will then keep a list of other random identifiers you’ve come in contact with. If, for example, you ride up an elevator with a group of other iPhone and Android devices, the anonymous data will keep track of that. If a healthcare professional determines one of those devices was attached to a human that later is diagnosed with Covid-19, you’ll get a notification that you’ve been exposed and advised of the next steps.
There is no geo-tracking. It’s just a list of what random numbers saw what other random numbers. I think it’s a smart API that helps us deal with a massive health crisis and protects user privacy at the same time.
There are already too many people dead. Count me in.