FAKE: Covid-19 trackers have NOT been secretly added to iPhone and Android handsets


A misleading claim widely shared on social media suggests "Covid-19 trackers" were covertly added to iPhone and Android handsets during unspecified "phone disruptions" in June.


post by British-Ghanaian actress Adjoa Andoh containing the claim, was retweeted more than 1,000 times, with the same wording also appearing in many other social media posts.

It is true that a Covid-19 tracing software tool has appeared in the settings of both Android phones and iPhones as part of an update of their operating systems.

But the "exposure notification" tool is switched off by default, and is not a tracing app itself.

It enables an app to run in the background while still using Bluetooth.

This lets the app measure the distance between two handsets - and then alert the phone owner if someone near them later tests positive for Covid-19.

The update has caused some confusion, with people querying the new addition to their handsets on social media.

"This is not a new app but is an extra element added to the phones' operating systems to enable approved developers to build apps that can potentially warn of proximity to infected individuals," said computer scientist Prof Alan Woodward, of Surrey University.

Comments

Most Read

Commonwealth Correspondents Program 2020 for Young Writers

Vivian Jill's Abrewa Mafia Comic Series Is The Best (Laugh Out Loud)

Ghanaian Actor Enock Darko (Watabomshell) Settles Down With Nigerian Actress Chinenyennebe

Night Vision Production Audition Call

Black Panther Star Chadwick Boseman Dies of Cancer Aged 43