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by disgruntledphd2 2170 days ago
The FT reported last week that the new UK app will be based on this code, apparently.

I personally find this hilarious, but good as compatibility between the apps is really important given the existence of the Common Travel Area between Ireland and the UK.

4 comments

It will be, just a shame it cost them many millions of pounds, wasted time and lives to arrive at the same conclusion that the technology industry has been repeatedly shouting at them for months now.

British exceptionalism at its finest: "Why would we do this easy thing when we can do it worse ourselves?"

Except of course, they had reasonable reasons for not wanting to go the Apple/Google route.

That route is designed for applications to alert users that they may have come in contact with someone ele who was infected.

But its privacy focus means that it doesn't help health authorities trying spot geographical clusters early.

The UK government want to use the app as part of its track and trace system to identify the need for local lockdowns.

Yeah, and Singapore - which originally inspired all these Covid-19 tracing apps - is still refusing to go the Apple/Google route for the same reason. There's also a chronological issue, with the original app being well into development when Google and Apple released their approach. But fundamentally, this isn't about facts - it's about the British press having turned Covid-19 into a cynical, Brexit-related partisan football. Somehow starting development early and co-operating with countries like France and Germany on a shared approach turns into letting people die through "British exceptionalism", merely through the media carefully omitting the details that contradict that narrative and letting readers fill them back in differently in their heads.
The trust in MSM in the UK is currently very low. You've expressed exactly why this is the case.
My trust in those who blame the "MSM" for everything is even lower.
reasonable reasons: also known as plausible deniability for shoveling good money after bad in no-bid contracts to their cronies.

If a government wants to monitor infection clusters, maybe they should work with the carriers and inject that code into the baseband?

Errr, they could do that. Or they could commission an app.
Sure. That's true. Except _everyone_ told them that it wasn't possible.

It isn't possible, and it never was. At least not using something that's smart-phone based.

I think smartphone based contact tracing and notification that uses actual geolocation might well work, but the whole advantage of the minimally disclosive smartphone apps based on BT radio was that they didn't share your every movement with big brother.

There seem to broadly have been three schools of thought:

1) Because of how radio propagation works, BT based contact tracing simply will not work.

2) BT based contact tracing will work but if Apple/Google don't support it through special permissions / an API then it will not work in practice.

3a) BT based contact tracing will work and workarounds can be designed even without phone OEM special treatment.

3b) Phone OEMs can be pressured to support our app.

NHSX was either in camp 3a or 3b, their view was that without certain characteristics that neither Apple nor Google were willing to support, it wouldn't be particularly useful. We don't know whether they genuinely thought they might be able to change the OEM's minds about this or whether they thought they could get their (admittedly very clever) system of ping pong keepalive signals to work. Incidentally, in lab and controlled conditions, it did work. If you switch on the app on your iphone and then walk into a crowd, it works. That's because there will be enough android devices around to ping your app into life. The problem is that if you switch the app on at home, walk down an empty street to your train station, and then get on the train, the app will have backgrounded already by the time you're back in BT range of an android device. This is the kind of thing where it is really easy to say ahead of time that it isn't likely to work but impossible to know for sure.

Many others here on HN were in camp 2. They believed that BT contact notification was possible and useful but that in practice, it would not be possible to make it work on iphones without special treatment from Apple. That has proved correct.

However it may be the case that in everyone's collective excitement, not enough people listened to RF engineers in camp 1. I think it was easy for people without much RF experience to think that while this would be an obstacle, it was still much better than nothing.

It now looks like they were indeed right, in a very wide class of enclosed space situations like buses, it just doesn't work at all. Once you remove public transport (I assume trains will have the same issue) as a use class, why does this even add anything to human contact tracing? Since in many places we are already requiring all restaurants and bars to keep contact details for every person in a party, that seems well covered. Most other interactions will be subject to traditional contact tracing.

Additionally it seems (and this may be UK specific, but I bet not) that one of the outcomes of the Isle of Wight trial was that people really did not like finding out that they would have to self isolate for 14 days from an app notification. It just doesn't have the gravitas of a human being calling and asking you to do it. I have to admit that I would not have guessed that. I suspect I share some personality traits with other HN users in that I would not in fact mind receiving that information from an app.

> just a shame it cost them many millions of pounds

It's not wasted if it goes to your mates as a kickback.

I think it may be Gibraltar's app that is based on this code:

'Mr Johnson claimed on Wednesday that “no country in the world has a working contact-tracing app”. But the German app has been downloaded 13m times and Gibraltar’s has had good initial take-up.

The British territory started working on a tracing app based on open source code developed by the Irish government and the Google-Apple platform in early May. As the UK was taking the decision to scrap its £12m app effort on June 18, Gibraltar launched its version.

Officials estimate a fifth of the population has downloaded it so far, at a cost of less than £100,000.'

Not sure (from a quick read) if the rest of the UK is going to go with the same/similar codebase.

https://www.ft.com/content/9446192a-aff1-4e95-93fb-a5adfbc7b...

That's the article I read, so apparently I'm wrong. I do know northern Ireland is using the same app though, which is good.
Swiss app is also getting good download traffic.
They are planning to use the same Google Play Services APIs. The code base is likely to be separate.

https://www.bbc.com/news/amp/technology-53095336

Got a link? That's truly hilarious. As an Irishman I hope Dominic Cummings reads this, as he looks for things on HN reference so he may keep up appearances as an "intellectual".