Privacy fears over COVID apps by Bahrain, Kuwait, Norway
Al JazeeraLive tracking of users’ locations puts thousands of people at risk, Amnesty International says. Amnesty International has raised privacy and security concerns over “invasive” contact-tracing apps rolled out by Bahrain, Kuwait and Norway to fight the coronavirus pandemic. The UK-based rights group said on Tuesday an investigation into COVID-19 apps being used by 11 countries had rated Bahrain’s “BeAware Bahrain”, Kuwait’s “Shlonik”, and Norway’s “Smittestopp” as among the “most dangerous” for human rights, putting hundreds of thousands of people at risk. “Bahrain, Kuwait and Norway have run roughshod over people’s privacy, with highly invasive surveillance tools which go far beyond what is justified in efforts to tackle COVID-19,” Claudio Guarnieri, head of Amnesty International’s Security Lab, said in a statement. “Governments across the world need to press pause on rolling out flawed or excessively intrusive contact tracing apps that fail to protect human rights,” Guarnieri said.