Difference between revisions of "The Institutionalisation of Digital Public Health: Lessons Learned from the COVID-19 App (Q4665)"

From Wikibase Personal data
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(‎Created a new Item: #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1590352666645)
 
(‎Created claim: quote (P203): It should first be observed that the introduction of a mobile phone app as a solution to implementing an effective form of contact tracing has been marred by incorrect assumptions and false dichotomies, the first and foremost being the one that accepts that there is a trade-off between the need to respect privacy/data protection and public health.)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Property / official websiteProperty / official website
-+
Property / date
 +
May 2020
Timestamp+2020-05-00T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 month
Before0
After0
Property / date: May 2020 / rank
 +
Normal rank
Property / quote
 +
It should first be observed that the introduction of a mobile phone app as a solution to implementing an effective form of contact tracing has been marred by incorrect assumptions and false dichotomies, the first and foremost being the one that accepts that there is a trade-off between the need to respect privacy/data protection and public health.
Property / quote: It should first be observed that the introduction of a mobile phone app as a solution to implementing an effective form of contact tracing has been marred by incorrect assumptions and false dichotomies, the first and foremost being the one that accepts that there is a trade-off between the need to respect privacy/data protection and public health. / rank
 +
Normal rank

Latest revision as of 20:51, 24 May 2020

Statements

May 2020
0 references
It should first be observed that the introduction of a mobile phone app as a solution to implementing an effective form of contact tracing has been marred by incorrect assumptions and false dichotomies, the first and foremost being the one that accepts that there is a trade-off between the need to respect privacy/data protection and public health.
0 references

Identifiers

0 references