After Singapore and the UK, the Indian government has open-sourced Aarogya Setu, one of the fastest growing contact tracing apps in the world.
Mint analyses how it works and the concerns around it After Singapore and the UK, the Indian government has open-sourced Aarogya Setu, one of the fastest growing contact tracing apps in the world.
But since the launch of the app, it has seen its fair share of controversy. Mint analyses how it works and the concerns around it. What are the concerns surrounding the app? Contact tracing apps such as Aarogya Setu require continuous access to location history and Bluetooth.
This, combined with the fact that they run on government servers, theoretically makes them tools that a government can use to track