TY - JOUR TI - COVID-19 Tracking Applications: A Human-Centric Analysis AB - The year 2020 will always be remembered with the imprints left by COVID-19 on our lives. While the pandemic has had many undesirable effects for the whole world, one of its biggest side effects has been the fast digital transformation that has taken place, which was already in progress with the Industry 4.0 era. The readily available technology and wireless communications infrastructures paved the way for a myriad of digital technologies for the containment of the disease using mobile contact tracing applications developed by health authority organizations in many countries. The mounting privacy concerns especially with Bluetooth-enabled proximity tracing and centralized tracking technologies used by these applications have given rise to the development of new privacy-preserving contact tracing protocols. Although these new protocols have alleviated the privacy concerns of citizens to a certain extent, widespread adoption is still far from being the reality. In this paper, we analyze existing contact tracing technologies from a human-centric standpoint by focusing on their privacy implications. Based on our comprehensive dataset consisting of the contact tracing application usage information in 94 countries, and the corresponding World Bank’s World Governance Indicators (WGI) data on political conditions, as well as World Values Survey (WVS) and European Values Study (EVS) data on confidence in government, we analyze our survey conducted on MTurk: the results demonstrate that privacy concerns are still the leading deterrent for people when deciding whether to use these applications. Nevertheless, it is a globally accepted argument that the most effective and fastest method for contact tracking will be digital technologies free from human errors and manual procedures. Accordingly, it is concluded that a policy of developing decentralized tracking solutions based entirely on user privacy should be followed, in which independent trusted third parties assume the role of authority in the system architecture, if absolutely necessary, in order to effectively combat the pandemic worldwide. An important feature of the systems to be developed to pave the way for widespread use is to provide the users the right to be forgotten. AU - Angin, Merih AU - Angin, Pelin DO - 10.31590/ejosat.837359 PY - 2021 JO - Avrupa Bilim ve Teknoloji Dergisi VL - 0 IS - 23 SN - 2148-2683 SP - 861 EP - 867 DB - TRDizin UR - http://search/yayin/detay/1176800 ER -