Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard pass on this.
I understand the emotion, but what is your educated reason for passing on this.
I would have thought that we could have distributed this in April and it would have been super useful, but I cannot come up with a solid reason why it would not still be useful today.
Honestly, I don’t need the stress of getting a notification if I happen to be close to someone else who tested positive. If I have symptoms, I’ll go take a test. But, there’s no real reason for me to deal with the fear and anxiety that will come from this.
But you could still have the virus (and infect others) even if you don’t have symptoms. So this will help you avoid the additional fear and anxiety of wondering after the fact if you passed it on to someone else. No?
That’s not something I’m really afraid of, to be honest. I worry about my own health, and expect others to do the same. I’m not counting on anyone to protect me.
If there is one thing that this virus has proven to us it is that at the end of the day, people are incredibly selfish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard pass on this.
I understand the emotion, but what is your educated reason for passing on this.
I would have thought that we could have distributed this in April and it would have been super useful, but I cannot come up with a solid reason why it would not still be useful today.
Honestly, I don’t need the stress of getting a notification if I happen to be close to someone else who tested positive. If I have symptoms, I’ll go take a test. But, there’s no real reason for me to deal with the fear and anxiety that will come from this.
But you could still have the virus (and infect others) even if you don’t have symptoms. So this will help you avoid the additional fear and anxiety of wondering after the fact if you passed it on to someone else. No?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard pass on this.
I understand the emotion, but what is your educated reason for passing on this.
I would have thought that we could have distributed this in April and it would have been super useful, but I cannot come up with a solid reason why it would not still be useful today.
Honestly, I don’t need the stress of getting a notification if I happen to be close to someone else who tested positive. If I have symptoms, I’ll go take a test. But, there’s no real reason for me to deal with the fear and anxiety that will come from this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard pass on this.
I understand the emotion, but what is your educated reason for passing on this.
I would have thought that we could have distributed this in April and it would have been super useful, but I cannot come up with a solid reason why it would not still be useful today.
Honestly, I don’t need the stress of getting a notification if I happen to be close to someone else who tested positive. If I have symptoms, I’ll go take a test. But, there’s no real reason for me to deal with the fear and anxiety that will come from this.
But you could still have the virus (and infect others) even if you don’t have symptoms. So this will help you avoid the additional fear and anxiety of wondering after the fact if you passed it on to someone else. No?
That’s not something I’m really afraid of, to be honest. I worry about my own health, and expect others to do the same. I’m not counting on anyone to protect me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Installed. I'd appreciate knowing if I was in contact with someone.
And, if for some reason I do catch it I'd like to be able to give a heads up to anyone I was around.
Oh look, a citizen!
How in the flip are we not all boiling down our complicated feelings and thoughts to this very basic bottom line?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm still not going anywhere where this would be useful. If I pass someone hiking or on a walk around the neighborhood wearing a mask, then I don't really need to know they were infected because the chance of me getting it was almost nil. If I start working in the office or going out to eat, then sure. But until then, no way am I letting the gov't keep tabs on my whereabouts. Especially because they can link this info to basically everything you do on your phone. They don't like your social media presence because you repost antifa stuff? well then, they'll be sure to nab you at the next protest. No thanks.
1. I don't think that's how these apps work. It's proximity and time, but teaching relative proximity with bluetooth rather than GPS.
2. If the government wants your location because of protests or antifa or whatever then they already have plenty of ways to access it. Get rid of your phone, wear a Burka, and enter your home through a subterranean network of sewers.
Can Jeff or someone confirm this (maybe with a cite) because it probably makes the difference between turning it on or not for us.
Both companies said privacy and preventing governments from using the system to compile data on citizens was a primary goal. The system uses Bluetooth signals from phones to detect encounters and does not use or store GPS location data.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm still not going anywhere where this would be useful. If I pass someone hiking or on a walk around the neighborhood wearing a mask, then I don't really need to know they were infected because the chance of me getting it was almost nil. If I start working in the office or going out to eat, then sure. But until then, no way am I letting the gov't keep tabs on my whereabouts. Especially because they can link this info to basically everything you do on your phone. They don't like your social media presence because you repost antifa stuff? well then, they'll be sure to nab you at the next protest. No thanks.
1. I don't think that's how these apps work. It's proximity and time, but teaching relative proximity with bluetooth rather than GPS.
2. If the government wants your location because of protests or antifa or whatever then they already have plenty of ways to access it. Get rid of your phone, wear a Burka, and enter your home through a subterranean network of sewers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard pass on this.
I understand the emotion, but what is your educated reason for passing on this.
I would have thought that we could have distributed this in April and it would have been super useful, but I cannot come up with a solid reason why it would not still be useful today.
Honestly, I don’t need the stress of getting a notification if I happen to be close to someone else who tested positive. If I have symptoms, I’ll go take a test. But, there’s no real reason for me to deal with the fear and anxiety that will come from this.
But you could still have the virus (and infect others) even if you don’t have symptoms. So this will help you avoid the additional fear and anxiety of wondering after the fact if you passed it on to someone else. No?
Anonymous wrote:I'm still not going anywhere where this would be useful. If I pass someone hiking or on a walk around the neighborhood wearing a mask, then I don't really need to know they were infected because the chance of me getting it was almost nil. If I start working in the office or going out to eat, then sure. But until then, no way am I letting the gov't keep tabs on my whereabouts. Especially because they can link this info to basically everything you do on your phone. They don't like your social media presence because you repost antifa stuff? well then, they'll be sure to nab you at the next protest. No thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard pass on this.
I understand the emotion, but what is your educated reason for passing on this.
I would have thought that we could have distributed this in April and it would have been super useful, but I cannot come up with a solid reason why it would not still be useful today.
Honestly, I don’t need the stress of getting a notification if I happen to be close to someone else who tested positive. If I have symptoms, I’ll go take a test. But, there’s no real reason for me to deal with the fear and anxiety that will come from this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard pass on this.
I understand the emotion, but what is your educated reason for passing on this.
I would have thought that we could have distributed this in April and it would have been super useful, but I cannot come up with a solid reason why it would not still be useful today.