Aarogya Setu: The Facts You Must Know Before You Download The App

A close look at India’s COVID-19 contact tracker that has raised many concerns

offline
A close look at India’s COVID-19 contact tracker that has raised many concerns

Released in April 2020, Aarogya Setu—India’s COVID-19 contact tracking app, has over 100 million downloads. Developed by the National Informatics Centre, Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology via “public-private partnership”, the app is meant to be a digital tool to battle the pandemic. Opinions differ, though on whether the app is indeed a powerful tool to supplement manual tracking of those who may be affected with COVID-19 or serves to strengthen state surveillance.

But, with the MIT Technology Review’s COVID tracing tracker singling out India as being the only democracy in the world to make the app mandatory for its billion-strong population, and giving it a rating of two stars out of five, there are legitimate concerns about data safety, privacy and transparency. The central government now says that it is not mandatory, but it is compulsory at several places.

How it works

Aarogya Setu employs smartphone technologies such as Bluetooth and GPS to enable users to know if they have been in contact with a COVID-19 patient, by scanning the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR)’s database of known cases of the disease. The app does this by keeping a record of its users it detected nearby, using Bluetooth, and by keeping a GPS log of all the places that the device had been at 15-minute intervals.

Aarogya Setu has four sections—Your Status, Media, COVID Updates and e-Pass and is available in 11 Indian languages. Upon installing the app, a user is required to fill in their name, number, gender, travel history and smoking habits. They are also required to take a health survey, and if the self-assessment hints at any COVID-19 symptoms, the data is uploaded to the servers; until then the records are stored on the phone. The app provides...

Read more!