US/World News

Israeli tech firm offers app to gov’t to track quarantined COVID-19 patients

(JNS) Israel’s Synel, which develops technical solutions based on geographical location, has reached out to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Health Minister Yuli Edelstein and coordinator of Israel’s efforts to curb the coronavirus outbreak Professor Ronni Gamzu to offer an app that tracks the digital presence of people in quarantine without using their smartphone’s microphone or camera. The Harmony Smart application allows users in quarantine to supply updates about their location, matching their addresses with their physical locations or the physical locations of their devices. The only information passed along to the government is the location from where the report was sent, and the time and telephone number of the quarantined user. Synel stressed that the app cannot access any hardware on users’ phones because it is based on GPS data.

In March, the company reached out to the relevant ministries and offered them the use of its app, but the government did not express an interest. 

“Today, in the midst of the second wave [of coronavirus] with tens of thousands of citizens in quarantine, as a proud Israeli business concerned about the health of the public, we are again reaching out and offering effective, immediate help in enforcing quarantine for thousands of Israelis,” the company stated in a letter to the government.

SHARE
RELATED POSTS
Four killed in Brussels Jewish museum shooting
Famed Israeli art academy mounts shoe exhibition in New York
Ted Cruz spearheads call to shutter PLO’s DC office

Leave Your Reply