As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, here are the latest stories on how the outbreak has affected privacy around the world:
- A coalition of nearly 300 academics wrote a letter endorsing Apple and Google's efforts to build a privacy-focused COVID-19 contact tracing app, TechCrunch reports.
- Ars Technica reports biometric-based driver monitoring systems are being updated to identify drivers wearing face masks.
- The Verge reports a coalition of nonprofits and scholars is urging social media platforms to hold onto COVID-19 misinformation data for future behavioral health studies.
- In an op-ed for The Hill, Ido Kilovaty and Mason Marks write the best safeguard against abuse of COVID-19 tracking tools will be the right to "digital self-defense."
- The concept of Bluetooth contact tracing is picking up traction across the world, Axios reports.
- Researchers and analysts have varying perspectives on what might happen with COVID-19 surveillance efforts beyond the pandemic, Reuters reports.
- From The New York Times' On Tech newsletter, Shira Ovide provides highlights from a conference call she and NYT Opinion Writer Charlie Warzel held with readers on COVID-19 tracking.
Editor's note: The IAPP Resource Center has compiled global privacy updates on its COVID-19 Guidance and Resources page.
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