Australian authorities resorted to one system mobile phone trackers to identify the locations visited by a couple infected with the coronavirus in an effort to prevent the virus from spreading and to test all the people they came into contact with.
The couple traveled from Johann, China, to Adelaide, Australia, to attend a home auction before being diagnosed with coronavirus and isolated in hospital.
And the two is in steady state and cooperate with state authorities to provide more information about places visited in Adelaide.
To get a better picture of their movements in regionThe police used a cell phone tracking system commonly used to track criminals.
The system requires nothing more than a phone number and helps retrieve information such as location data collected each time the cell phone was connected to a cellular antenna. This data is collected by mobile providers and has nothing to do with whether you have enabled the gps system.
Under Australian law, mobile operators are required to collect this information and store it for two years. It is possible to hand over this data to the legal authorities order.
Adelaide Public Health Officer Nicola Spurrier said the system was particularly important because the couple did not live in Australia, and could not accurately describe the areas they visited. Using cell phone data, they can better identify these locations.
For the record, the property in Adelaide, where the couple visited and attended their auction, was sealed as a precautionary measure.