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Home SCIENCE NEWS Infectious Emerging Diseases

New tool reveals security and privacy issues with contact tracing apps

February 25, 2021
in Infectious Emerging Diseases
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Researchers have developed a tool to identify security and privacy risks associated with Covid-19 contact tracing apps.

COVIDGuardian, the first automated security and privacy assessment tool, tests contact tracing apps for potential threats such as malware, embedded trackers and private information leakage.

Using the COVIDGuardian tool, cybersecurity experts assessed 40 Covid-19 contact tracing apps that have been employed worldwide for potential privacy and security threats. Their findings include that:

  • 72.5 per cent of the apps use at least one insecure cryptographic algorithm.
  • Three quarters of apps contained at least one tracker that reports information to third parties such as Facebook Analytics or Google Firebase.
  • Whilst most apps were free of malware, the Kyrgyzstan app Stop COVID-19 KG was discovered to have malware.

Following their analysis, the researchers released the results to vendors. Further testing later found that privacy and security weaknesses on four apps had been fixed, and one vulnerable app was found to no longer be available.

Dr Gareth Tyson, Senior Lecturer at Queen Mary University of London, said: “With the pandemic there was a rapid need for contact tracing apps to support efforts to control the spread of Covid-19. Unsurprisingly we found that this had resulted in some relatively mainstream security bugs being introduced worldwide. Some of the most common risks relate to the use of out-of-date cryptographic algorithms and the storage of sensitive information in plain text formats that could be read by potential attackers.”

“Our work is helping developers to address these problems. Through COVIDGuardian we’ve produced a tool that can be used by developers to discover and fix potential weaknesses in their apps and share guidelines that will help to ensure user privacy and security is maintained.”

To support this work the researchers also performed a survey involving over 370 individuals to understand the likelihood that they would use a contact tracing app and highlight concerns around their use. The results suggested that the privacy and accuracy of contact tracing apps had the biggest impact on whether individuals would use the app.

As part of the survey, volunteers were also asked about their preferences with regards to decentralised and centralised apps. Dr Tyson, said: “Security and privacy concerns have been a big issue affecting the uptake of these apps. We were surprised that the debate around decentralised vs centralised apps didn’t seem so important and, instead, users were more focused on the exact details of what private information is collected. This should encourage developers to offer stronger privacy guarantees for their apps.”

###

Notes to editors

* Research publication: ‘An Empirical Assessment of Global COVID-19 Contact Tracing Applications’ Ruoxi Sun, Wei Wang, Minhui Xue, Gareth Tyson, Seyit Camtepez, Damith C. Ranasinghe.

* The paper will be presented at the International Conference on Software Engineering on May 23-29 2021. A copy of the paper is available at: https://arxiv.org/abs/2006.10933.

About Queen Mary

Queen Mary University of London is a research-intensive university that connects minds worldwide. A member of the prestigious Russell Group, we work across the humanities and social sciences, medicine and dentistry, and science and engineering, with inspirational teaching directly informed by our world-leading research. In the most recent Research Excellence Framework we were ranked 5th in the country for the proportion of research outputs that were world-leading or internationally excellent. We have over 25,000 students and offer more than 240 degree programmes. Our reputation for excellent teaching was rewarded with silver in the most recent Teaching Excellence Framework. Queen Mary has a proud and distinctive history built on four historic institutions stretching back to 1785 and beyond. Common to each of these institutions – the London Hospital Medical College, St Bartholomew’s Medical College, Westfield College and Queen Mary College – was the vision to provide hope and opportunity for the less privileged or otherwise under-represented. Today, Queen Mary University of London remains true to that belief in opening the doors of opportunity for anyone with the potential to succeed and helping to build a future we can all be proud of.

Media Contact
Sophie McLachlan
[email protected]

Tags: Computer ScienceInfectious/Emerging DiseasesSystem Security/HackersTechnology/Engineering/Computer Science
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