Gauging the acceptance of contact tracing technology: An empirical study of Singapore residents’ concerns with sharing their information and willingness to trust
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, governments began implementing various forms of contact tracing technology. Singapore’s implementation of its contact tracing technology, TraceTogether, however, was met with significant concern by its population, with regard to privacy and data security. This c...
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sg-smu-ink.sol_research-52402023-10-11T08:15:28Z Gauging the acceptance of contact tracing technology: An empirical study of Singapore residents’ concerns with sharing their information and willingness to trust Ong, Ee-Ing LOO, Wee Ling In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, governments began implementing various forms of contact tracing technology. Singapore’s implementation of its contact tracing technology, TraceTogether, however, was met with significant concern by its population, with regard to privacy and data security. This concern did not fit with the general perception that Singaporeans have a high level of trust in its government. We explore this disconnect, using responses to our survey (conducted pre-COVID-19) in which we asked participants about their level of concern with the government and business collecting certain categories of personal data. The results show that respondents had less concern with the government as compared to a business collecting most forms of personal data. Nonetheless, they still had a moderately high level of concern about sharing such data with the government. We further found that income, education and perceived self-exposure to AI are associated with higher levels of concern with the government collecting personal data relevant to contact tracing, namely health history, location and social network friends’ information. This has implications for Singapore residents’ trust in government collecting data and hence the success of such projects, not just for contact tracing purposes but for other government-related data collection undertakings. 2022-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3282 info:doi/10.4337/9781800880788.00010 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5240/viewcontent/Gauging_the_Acceptance_of_Contact_Tracing_Technology_WP__2_April_2021_.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University AI contact tracing COVID-19 empirical work survey data privacy data security surveillance trust Singapore pandemics Asian Studies Information Security Privacy Law Science and Technology Law |
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AI contact tracing COVID-19 empirical work survey data privacy data security surveillance trust Singapore pandemics Asian Studies Information Security Privacy Law Science and Technology Law Ong, Ee-Ing LOO, Wee Ling Gauging the acceptance of contact tracing technology: An empirical study of Singapore residents’ concerns with sharing their information and willingness to trust |
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In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, governments began implementing various forms of contact tracing technology. Singapore’s implementation of its contact tracing technology, TraceTogether, however, was met with significant concern by its population, with regard to privacy and data security. This concern did not fit with the general perception that Singaporeans have a high level of trust in its government. We explore this disconnect, using responses to our survey (conducted pre-COVID-19) in which we asked participants about their level of concern with the government and business collecting certain categories of personal data. The results show that respondents had less concern with the government as compared to a business collecting most forms of personal data. Nonetheless, they still had a moderately high level of concern about sharing such data with the government. We further found that income, education and perceived self-exposure to AI are associated with higher levels of concern with the government collecting personal data relevant to contact tracing, namely health history, location and social network friends’ information. This has implications for Singapore residents’ trust in government collecting data and hence the success of such projects, not just for contact tracing purposes but for other government-related data collection undertakings. |
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Ong, Ee-Ing LOO, Wee Ling |
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Ong, Ee-Ing LOO, Wee Ling |
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Ong, Ee-Ing |
title |
Gauging the acceptance of contact tracing technology: An empirical study of Singapore residents’ concerns with sharing their information and willingness to trust |
title_short |
Gauging the acceptance of contact tracing technology: An empirical study of Singapore residents’ concerns with sharing their information and willingness to trust |
title_full |
Gauging the acceptance of contact tracing technology: An empirical study of Singapore residents’ concerns with sharing their information and willingness to trust |
title_fullStr |
Gauging the acceptance of contact tracing technology: An empirical study of Singapore residents’ concerns with sharing their information and willingness to trust |
title_full_unstemmed |
Gauging the acceptance of contact tracing technology: An empirical study of Singapore residents’ concerns with sharing their information and willingness to trust |
title_sort |
gauging the acceptance of contact tracing technology: an empirical study of singapore residents’ concerns with sharing their information and willingness to trust |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2022 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3282 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5240/viewcontent/Gauging_the_Acceptance_of_Contact_Tracing_Technology_WP__2_April_2021_.pdf |
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