France Accuses Apple of Refusing Help With 'StopCovid' App

Countries are rushing to develop Bluetooth-based smartphone apps to keep the pandemic in check.

France Accuses Apple of Refusing Help With 'StopCovid' App

French authorities say that Apple has so far refused to keep Bloetooth running in background

Highlights
  • The apps would use bluetooth to allow phones to interact with each other
  • iPhones normally don't allow Bluetooth to run in the background
  • French officials want Apple to change the Bluetooth settings
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France accused Apple on Tuesday of undermining its effort to fight the coronavirus by refusing to help make its iPhone handsets more compatible with a planned "StopCovid" contact-tracing app.

Countries are rushing to develop smartphone apps, which are seen as a way to help keep the coronavirus epidemic in check while reopening the economy.

The apps would use the Bluetooth feature that allows phones to interact with nearby devices to help detect when users come into contact with people who potentially carry the virus.

Apple's iPhones normally block access to Bluetooth unless the user is actively running an app. French officials want Apple to change the settings to let their app access Bluetooth in the background, so it is always on. So far, they say, Apple has refused.

"Apple could have helped us make the application work even better on the iPhone. They have not wished to do so," France's minister for digital technology, Cedric O, told BFM Business TV.

"I regret this, given that we are in a period where everyone is mobilised to fight against the epidemic, and given that a large company that is doing so well economically is not helping out a government in this crisis."

A spokesman for Apple in France declined to comment.

The issue of Bluetooth access on iPhone handsets is one of several security-related questions that have arisen as countries try to roll out smartphone apps to fight the coronavirus.

France, along with some other countries, wants to keep contact data in a central database, arguing this would make it easier for the authorities to track suspected coronavirus cases.

Apple and Google, between them responsible for the operating systems on nearly all smartphones, want data to be stored on the phones themselves, out of government reach, saying this would better protect the privacy of users.

O, the French minister, said he could not explain the reasoning behind Apple's decision on Bluetooth.

"We consider that oversight of the healthcare system, fighting the coronavirus, is a matter for governments and not necessarily for big American companies," he said.

The French minister said the app should be ready to be deployed on June 2 regardless of Apple's stance, and would enter a testing phase in the week of May 11 when the country starts to unwind its lockdown.

In France, Apple's mobile operating system accounted for 21.1 percent of the market in the first quarter, while Google's Android accounted for 78.8 percent, according to Kantar research.

Britain, which is using the same centralised approach as France to store data, will start testing its own COVID-19 tracing app on the Isle of Wight from Tuesday.

© Thomson Reuters 2020


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