Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

COVID-19 tracing app starts beta testing

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jul, 2020 09:51 PM
  • COVID-19 tracing app starts beta testing

A Canadian smartphone app meant to warn users if they've been in close contact with someone who tests positive for COVID-19 is now in beta testing.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in June that it would be ready for testing just in Ontario starting early this month; the trial to look for bugs and other problems was delayed for reasons the government has never specified.

Now the Canadian Digital Service, an agency that puts federal services online, is asking people to sign up and put the app through its paces over two to four days.

"We're testing the app, and not you," the agency's notice says. Participants will be asked to complete certain tasks with the app and report on how well it works for them.

When it's fully functional, the "COVID Alert" app is supposed to track phones' locations without collecting personal data anywhere centrally, using digital identifications unique to each phone.

Then users can be told if their phones have recently been near the phone of a person who later volunteers that they have tested positive for the novel coronavirus.

In the test phase, the agency says the app will send false alerts just to make sure the system works.

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau says wage-subsidy program to be extended as steep job losses continue

Trudeau says wage-subsidy program to be extended as steep job losses continue
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government's emergency wage-subsidy program will be extended beyond its early-June endpoint. The program covers 75 per cent of worker pay up to $847 a week to try to help employers keep employees on the job in the face of steep declines in revenue due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Trudeau says wage-subsidy program to be extended as steep job losses continue

Huge job losses in B.C. indicate a 'hard road ahead': finance minister

Huge job losses in B.C. indicate a 'hard road ahead': finance minister
British Columbia Finance Minister Carole James says she doesn't want to sugar coat what will be a hard road ahead as labour force figures show the province lost a quarter of a million jobs in April. Combined with jobless figures in March, almost 400,000 people were unemployed.

Huge job losses in B.C. indicate a 'hard road ahead': finance minister

Canadians trust doctors, scientists and government more since pandemic began

Canadians trust doctors, scientists and government more since pandemic began
A new survey suggests the COVID-19 pandemic has given Canadians almost absolute trust in doctors. The Proof Strategies annual trust index is usually completed in January but when Canada went into a nationwide lockdown to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus the public-relations firm decided to ask the same questions again in early May.    

Canadians trust doctors, scientists and government more since pandemic began

Greyhound Canada to shut down temporarily all bus routes as ridership plunges

Greyhound Canada to shut down temporarily all bus routes as ridership plunges
Greyhound Canada is temporarily slamming the brakes on all of its bus routes and services as ridership plummets amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The transportation company says starting May 13 it will halt all routes until passenger demand recovers. 

Greyhound Canada to shut down temporarily all bus routes as ridership plunges

Canadian Forces still unsure how to raise helicopter that crashed

Canadian Forces still unsure how to raise helicopter that crashed
The Canadian military is still determining how to raise the wreckage of a military helicopter that crashed into the Mediterranean Sea last week, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said Thursday. The crash killed six members of the Canadian Forces, though the remains of only one, Sub-Lt. Abbigail Cowbrough, have been recovered.

Canadian Forces still unsure how to raise helicopter that crashed

Feds to partly cover 'top ups' for front-line workers on minimum wage

Feds to partly cover 'top ups' for front-line workers on minimum wage
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government, provinces and territories will spend $4 billion to increase the wages of essential workers in the COVID-19 pandemic. He says the details are still to be finalized with some provinces.  

Feds to partly cover 'top ups' for front-line workers on minimum wage