France is still rejecting the Apple/Google coronavirus contact tracing API, despite acknowledging that it offers an ‘innovative and efficient’ approach.

The country is planning to begin testing its own app in the week of May 11, says a government minister …

Reuters reports that the French government sees contact tracing as an essential element in easing lockdown restrictions.

The minister does not give any rational reason for the decision not to use the contact tracing API created by the two tech giants.

Minister for Digital Affairs Cedric O, a member of President Emmanuel Macron’s inner circle, presented the app as a key element of France’s strategy to stave off the coronavirus as authorities grapple with the prospect of mass testing.

Most other European countries plan to use the Apple/Google API, including Germany, which last week did a U-turn on previously announced plans to use a centralized database of Bluetooth codes.

This now leaves France and the UK creating their own systems instead of using the API, a decision I’ve argued is dangerous as well as pointless.

In the US, the CDC has indicated that the approach taken by the Apple/Google API is preferable to one using a central database of codes.

Put simply, some people who would have installed an Apple/Google-powered app will refuse to install the British one. That means less contact tracing will take place, fewer people will be notified that they have been exposed, more people will be infected and – ultimately – more people will die.

Photo: The Daily Swig