Iran’s Coronavirus ‘Diagnosis’ App Looks More Like a Monitoring Tool

Iran actually has one of the most severe infections of coronaviruses, but the government seems to be using it for political influence. Vice has heard that an app funded by the government, AC19, is a resource to help the existence of the virus diagnose, but also demands real-time information about where the virus is located obviously not appropriate for asking anyone whether they should go to or not to the hospital.

AC19’s developer, Sarzamin Housmand (formerly Smart Land Solutions), is also known for developing government clones of Telegram that weren’t as secure as the real thing and were geared more toward enabling surveillance.

While it’s not clear exactly what the Iranian government is doing with the data, it’s eager to brag about the scale. ICT minister MJ Azari Jahromi recently boasted that millions of users were submitting data, ostensibly to help create a risk map.

The problem, as you might imagine, is that Iran is notorious for extensive populating monitoring and a willingness to take extreme measures to clamp down on dissent.

There are concerns Iran is underreporting its coronavirus infection and mortality rates to maintain the appearance of control and quash opposition, and AC19 may help it identify where some of those opponents are going.

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