
© Getty Images / Thomas Tolstrup
Three American universities have received government coronavirus funding to create a mobile app combining contact-tracing with an individual "risk score" - mimicking the Chinese apps the US denounced as dystopian nightmares.
The University of Southern California, Emory University, and the University of Texas Health Science Center began work last week on a mobile app that will
track the user's location and Covid-19 symptoms in real time, in the name of "quarantine and decontamination." The idea is to bestow individual "risk scores" upon
not only individuals, but the public locations they visit. Will it stop there, or will it dovetail with the privatized de-facto social credit score already being cobbled together by Big Tech in conjunction with Big Brother?
Media coverage of the project neglects to specify whether installing the app will be mandatory for incoming students, but there's plenty of precedent for forcing students to submit to tracking in order to attend class. A tracking app called Spotter had already been forced on students, pre-coronavirus, at the University of Missouri, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Duke University, among other campuses.
Comment: Episode 375 of the Corbett Report: Corona World Order See also: