Covid-19: Australian coronavirus tracing app surpasses 1 million downloads in 5 hours
Covid-19: Australian coronavirus tracing app surpasses 1 million downloads in 5 hours
Over a million Australians have downloaded the government's coronavirus tracing app within hours of its launch, Xinhua news agency reported citing local media sources.
The COVIDSafe app was released at 6 p.m. (local time) on Sunday night.
Health Minister Greg Hunt said on Monday morning that by 10:30 p.m. on Sunday it had been downloaded 1 million times, rising to 1.13 million by 6 a.m. local time on Monday.
He was quoted as saying by Sky News Australia that the number of downloads in the first five hours after launch exceeded what the government expected in the first five days.
"Australians have responded magnificently," he said.
"We had in our quiet hopes thought that we might get to a million in five days. We were lucky enough to get there in five hours."
The app uses Bluetooth to check if any other devices with the app installed are within 1.5 meters of the user.
If a user tests positive for COVID-19 health authorities can then use the app to find other users that they have been in close contact with and warn them that they may have been exposed to the virus.
"It is an additional tool. It is over and above what was already being done, and what that means is that we are able to help find those cases that might be in the community and undiagnosed," Hunt said.
"We know we have had 500 (cases) so far where we couldn't find the original source. This gives our disease experts the chance to help find and discover those cases, and that could save the life of an older Australian, it could protect a nurse or a doctor, and it could protect ourselves and our families," he added
The government has previously stated that in order for it to be effective, 40 per cent of the Australian population, or 10 million people, must download the app.
With many Australians raising concerns about the security of the app, Hunt on Monday committed to releasing its source code for examination within weeks.
"The source code will be released within two weeks," he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
"The reason for that is that there's a constant review of the safety and security.
"Our first task is to make sure the security assessment is done and that there is absolute protection of privacy above all else," he said further.
There are currently 6,719 COVID-19 cases in the country, with the majority of those having already recovered.
Australia's death toll from the virus is at 83.
-ANI
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