Table of Contents
CURRENT AFFAIR
- The Survey of India (SoI) has developed an e-platform
- Will collect geotagged information on the nation’s critical infrastructure in order to help the Government and public health agencies take critical decisions in response to the current Covid-19 pandemic situation.
- To support this platform, a mobile application called Sahyog has also been created.
- This app will help collect location specific data with the help of community workers.
Survey of India
- It is the National Survey and Mapping Organization of the country under the Department of Science & Technology.
- It was established in 1767 and is the oldest scientific department of the Government of India.
- It is headquartered at Dehradun, Uttarakhand.
- The Survey of India acts as adviser to the Government of India on all survey matters.
- Eg. Geodesy, Photogrammetry, Mapping and Map Reproduction.
- Geodesy is the science of accurately measuring and understanding the Earth’s geometric shape, orientation in space and gravity field.
- Photogrammetry is the science of making measurements from photographs.
BENEFITS
- Swift Solution:
- Data collection by formal land survey is a lengthy and time taking process but the mobile app can help crowdsource data quickly.
- Complement Arogya Setu App:
- This will complement the recently launched Aarogya Setu App that helps trace the contacts of those who may have been infected by Covid-19.
- Relevant Information:
- Information regarding biomedical waste disposals, containment areas, available hospitals for Covid-19 cases, ICMR (Indian Council of Medical Research) testing laboratories and quarantine camps will be integrated on this platform with their latitudinal and longitudinal parameters.
- This could be customised to a variety of ‘Covid-related applications’ such as healthcare facilities, infection clusters and disaster management
- Data Localisation:
- Data collected using Sahyog application will be used for creating various applications for everyone’s usage and would facilitate building a dataset that remains inside India.
- Support System: The data fed by the volunteers working on the ground such as the ASHA (Accredited Social Health Activist) and Anganwadi workers will lead to a good support system for the government and doctors on ground.
- Health Delivery System: This will strengthen the public health delivery system of the central and state governments
- By providing necessary information support to workers dealing with the challenges of health, socio-economic distress and livelihood changes.
- Integration on Single Platform: A lot of geospatial data about locations of fire services, banquet halls etc. is already present with the Government which was not integrated in a single platform.
CONCERNS
- Privacy: Arogya Setu and applications like Sahyog that link to it, could infringe privacy as there wasn’t clarity on how the data would be shared between the two applications.
- Lack of Clarity: Arogya Setu’s terms of use were unclear on several aspects including how long data would be stored and what would happen to it after the pandemic has ceased.
- Effectiveness: There is also a question of proportionality, i.e. in India, compared to its population, smartphone users are very less which means very few people will be able to download the app.
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