This is the website for DCTA-datarights.com. A framework for developers, funders, etc to judge the individual data rights of a digital contact tracing solution.
Epidemiologists identify DCTA apps as a tool that can help get people treated earlier, and reopen society. For digital contact tracing to be effective, it must have high adoption. However, large scale centralized digital contact tracing can be used for unwanted surveillance. Location-tracking apps have exposed major concerns that these tech solutions will permanently erode the privacy of a large number of the world’s population.
It is now apparent that measures needed to control the damage from COVID-19 will be ongoing and long-term. It is crucially important that the tech solutions rapidly built during this period comply with data privacy regulations and do not set the public up for future exploitation. The solution to these problems is requiring that developers build apps on a foundation of privacy-preservation and interoperability. The Rights are necessary to achieve this end. CASE MANAGEMENT TOOLS Case management tools for case investigation and contact tracing capture data on cases and contacts and can help improve the efficiency of manual contact tracing and medical monitoring methodologies. A case management tool should generally have the following capabilities:
Ability to ensure data security and confidentiality of significant volumes of client information, which is critical to maintain community trust in using any case management tool. Interoperability capabilities to receive input from the public health authorities (PHA) (including local, state, tribal, and territorial public health departments), information systems and/or laboratory systems, either via import or real-time synchronization
Feel free to do a pull request and fix typos, etc
Please edit the members.yaml file.
Add your logo (preferrably SVG) to the static/images/members/ dir.
You can edit the _index.md file and that will edit the main content of the site.
The site and code is licensed under the MIT License
The content is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
you can email questions@dcta-datarights.com to reach the team.