1/ Unlike this time last year, when Singapore's epidemic curve shot up and we were seeing new cases in the 100s/1000s (mostly within migrant worker dorms), the number of cases have come right down now, and tend to be mostly imported cases.
2/ Of course, this drop in cases + vaccination roll-out doesn't mean that we should get complacent and think that #Covid19 is over, because it isn't.
But what are we doing doubling down so hard on #Covid19 tech and surveillance?
3/ Early last year, the government introduced TraceTogether, a contact-tracing app that works via Bluetooth to ping close contacts.
4/ Adoption of TraceTogether was left voluntary at first; take-up was poor. But that didn't mean that there was no digital contact-tracing, because what quickly became mandatory all over the place was SafeEntry, where you have to scan QR codes to register entry into places.
5/ Over the past year, SafeEntry is *everywhere*. If I need to buy eggs, I need to scan a QR code for SafeEntry into the mall, then a QR code to get into the supermarket. If I need to go to any other shops, I have to scan into each and every shop. restofworld.org/2021/trace-tog…
6/ Towards the end of 2020, the government started talking about merging the two systems to create TraceTogether-only SafeEntry (TT-only SE), and mandating it at certain venues. channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore…
7/ The government kept assuring people that TraceTogether was privacy focused and that it doesn't track your location. Well, TT-only SE made that promise pointless, because even if TraceTogether doesn't track your location, SafeEntry does. That's the whole point of SE.
8/ So a TT-only SE merge means that the government is collecting not just data of your movement from place to place, but can also access a list of close contacts off your phone or TraceTogether token if they want.
9/ The government at first repeatedly assured Singaporeans that data collected via digital contact-tracing systems would *only* be used for contact-tracing.
Here's two ministers assuring Singaporeans in June 2020:
10/ This promise turned out to be false. In January this year, the government admitted that data collected via digital contact-tracing systems like TraceTogether could be obtained by law enforcement for investigations after all. wethecitizens.net/whoops-turns-o…
11/ Not only did it turn out that the police could obtain the data, Singaporeans were told that they *had already done so*. They did it *before* Minister Vivian Balakrishnan assured us in June 2020 that such data would only be used for contact-tracing. straitstimes.com/singapore/poli…
12/ In Parliament, Vivian Balakrishnan admitted that he hadn't been thinking of the Criminal Procedure Code—which gives the police to obtain data for investigations—when he was making promises at the June press conference. 🙃
13/ The ensuing public outcry led to the government acknowledging their "error" in not stating earlier that the data collected via TraceTogether and SafeEntry was not exempt from the Criminal Procedure Code. straitstimes.com/singapore/legi…
14/ Parliament passed a new law to keep police from obtaining contact-tracing data except in investigations into 7 types of serious offences. This limited access, but it also legitimised something the govt had originally told SGeans wouldn't happen. wethecitizens.net/on-consent-and…
15/ Did this TraceTogether debacle slow us down and make us think more about surveillance and the wisdom of rushing head-long into "tech solutions"? Did we learn any lessons?
16/ Although it's been delayed, the government is continuing with its plan to make TraceTogether, a previously voluntary contact-tracing system, compulsory. It's already compulsory at some venues, and has already been mandatory for migrant workers living in dorms for months.
17/ The govt has said that this is all necessary because this is an extraordinary period. Okay, we know #Covid19 is a ridic situation. But there's no end date to all this data collection, not even a tentative one (that can be reviewed and extended if necessary).
18/ Instead, #Covid19 tech surveillance is starting look increasingly permanent. The government is now pushing out SafeEntry Gateways for TT-only SE. straitstimes.com/singapore/new-…
19/ Basically, you have to let the SafeEntry Gateway Box ping the TraceTogether app on your phone, or ping your TraceTogether token. It can also tell if your token is working or not; if it isn't, you have to get it replaced.(Graphic from @straits_times)
20/ Not all venues are using this gateway. But some are adopting more permanent-looking check-ins. The gantries pictured require you to scan the SE QR code, then let the gantry scan your phone with the check-in page, while a facial recognition temperature scanner takes your temp.
21/ It has never been clear to me at any of these entry checkpoints if facial recognition has been activated on the facial recognition temperature scanner, and if these scanners are taking our photos. But they certainly could do that.
22/ Such gantries + the SafeEntry Gateway rollout can't be cheap. Significant amounts of resources are being spent on putting these things up all over the place. It suggests that this sort of #Covid19 surveillance is not going away any time soon.
23/ I understand that contact-tracing is important during the pandemic, as do all the privacy conscious activists and friends I know. We are all aware of the necessity of being able to trace and test people. So this isn't about denying #Covid19 or its effects.
24/ But there are very important questions about surveillance and privacy that have been not only neglected, but bulldozed in this relentless enthusiasm for more, more, more tech, and more, more, more data collection.
25/ In many ways this is because, as I wrote for @LowyInstitute, privacy has never been at the top of our minds in Singapore, nor featured very much in public discourse. lowyinstitute.org/the-interprete…
26/ What's worrying to me is how much surveillance is getting normalised, and we aren't talking about whether it's necessary, or what the trade-offs are. Why is it that surveillance seems to be going up (or getting entrenched) even thought the #Covid19 numbers have come down?
27/ What are we entrenching in society? How much data collection/surveillance will there be in the "new normal"? Have we really given informed consent to all the data collection that the state undertakes, and will continue to undertake? How will it impact us + our communities?
28/ I'm writing about Singapore here, but I'm sure it's happening elsewhere too. We all need to look out for governments who are using #Covid19 as a perfect opportunity to introduce more surveillance.
- FIN -
Thank you for reading this thread! Just going to leave this here:
A lot more people have read this thread since I first posted it—thank you!
To be very clear, this isn’t a thread about how contact-tracing is bad. What I *am* saying, though, is that Singapore is failing to strike the right balance.
🧵 on Twitter and Mu*k, from the perspective of a journalist/activist from #Singapore (me)
1/ I am from a country that has significant issues with civil, political, and human rights. But my government also puts significant effort into public relations to bolster its reputation.
2/ I'm constantly meeting people who have no idea that, in #Singapore, you can be arrested for holding up a placard in public. That 11 men have been executed this year for #drugs. That we have serious issues with press freedom and media diversity.
3/ In this context, Twitter has been, and is, an extremely valuable tool in allowing me — a freelance journalist and activist with limited resources and no big institutional backing — to talk to people outside of #Singapore about our problems.
#Singapore will finally repeal Section 377A (which criminalises sex between men), while also undermining the main point of repealing Section 377A by enshrining the discrimination against #LGBTQ people elsewhere
Once the Constitution is amended it's going to be freakin' hard to change it again. And as Lee himself points out, this is not just about marriage. It affects housing, education, who gets to be recognised as next-of-kin, even advertising and film codes (media censorship).
Right now, Section 377A is not enforced. So the reason it should be repealed is not 'cos gay men are getting arrested for having sex, but 'cos 377A exists as a signal that #LGBTQ people are different and less acceptable and therefore can be discriminated against.
🧵 I’ve been sharing updates but wanted to put together a thread covering the substantive points of the Court of Appeal hearing today (well, yesterday now) involving 24 death row prisoners in #Singapore
On 1 August, 24 death row prisoners filed an originating claim against the state, in relation to their right to access to justice. They claimed that the practice of handing out punitive cost orders against lawyers have deterred lawyers from taking on late-stage capital cases.
Due to this fear, they say that they’ve faced difficulties finding lawyers to represent them. Therefore, this practice of imposing cost orders has affected their constitutional rights in relation to access to justice.
It’s been about an hour since the court stood down to deliberate the appeal brought by 24 death row prisoners against the High Court striking out their civil suit relating to their right to access to justice. The hearing is conducted on Zoom so the 24 are calling in from prison.
On multiple screens in the courtroom you can see the Zoom gallery. 24 of those little rectangles are the death row prisoners, representing themselves because they don’t have a lawyer to represent them in this application.
It took some time to bring them all into the Zoom room and make sure they were all connected, audio working, etc. So instead of putting them in the waiting room like it usually does, they’ve just been left in the room while the judges were put in the waiting room.
Okay, finally got access. If I understood what happened to me in interrogation correctly, after this morning there are now *more* offences that @justanotherock and I are on the hook for. Just going to sum it up as best I can…
The original 2 alleged offences that @justanotherock and I were questioned for this morning were: (1) when 4 of us hung out outside Changi Prison chatting the night of Kahar was executed, and (2) when we took photos outside of prison a couple of nights before Nagen was hanged.
However, ‘cos @justanotherock and I were wearing (different) T-shirts with anti-#deathpenalty slogans today, the police claim that we have committed another offence of “illegal procession”, ‘cos we walked from the market across the street to the police station this morning.