TIIS (Çѱ¹ÀÎÅͳÝÁ¤º¸ÇÐȸ)
Current Result Document :
ÇѱÛÁ¦¸ñ(Korean Title) |
A Study on Personal Information Protection amid the COVID-19 Pandemic |
¿µ¹®Á¦¸ñ(English Title) |
A Study on Personal Information Protection amid the COVID-19 Pandemic |
ÀúÀÚ(Author) |
Yong-Woon Hwang
Taehoon Kim
Daehee Seo
Im-Yeong Lee
Min Woo Kim
Il Hwan Kim
Jaehyoun Kim
Oh Jeong Ha
Jinsook Chang
Sangdon Park
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¿ø¹®¼ö·Ïó(Citation) |
VOL 16 NO. 12 PP. 4062 ~ 4080 (2022. 12) |
Çѱ۳»¿ë (Korean Abstract) |
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¿µ¹®³»¿ë (English Abstract) |
COVID-19, a highly infectious disease, has affected the globe tremendously since its outbreak during late 2019 in Wuhan, China. In order to respond to the pandemic, governments around the world introduced a variety of public health measures including contact-tracing, a method to identify individuals who may have come into contact with a confirmed COVID-19 patient, which usually leads to quarantine of certain individuals. Like many other governments, the South Korean health authorities adopted public health measures using latest data technologies. Key data technology-based quarantine measures include:(1) Electronic Entry Log; (2) Self-check App; and (3) COVID-19 Wristband, and heavily relied on individual¡¯s personal information for contact-tracing and self-isolation. In fact, during the early stages of the pandemic, South Korea¡¯s strategy proved to be highly effective in containing the spread of coronavirus while other countries suffered significantly from the surge of COVID-19 patients. However, while the South Korean COVID-19 policy was hailed as a success, it must be noted that the government achieved this by collecting and processing a wide range of personal information. In collecting and processing personal information, the data minimum principle – one of the widely recognized common data principles between different data protection laws – should be applied. Public health measures have no exceptions, and it is even more crucial when government activities are involved. In this study, we provide an analysis of how the governments around the world reacted to the COVID-19 pandemic and evaluate whether the South Korean government¡¯s digital quarantine measures ensured the protection of its citizen¡¯s right to privacy. |
Å°¿öµå(Keyword) |
Cloud Access Control
Data Sharing
Attribute-based Signcryption
Traceability
Constant-Size Ciphertext
Outsourcing
Privacy
Personal Information
COVID-19 pandemic
Data Minimization Principle
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