Seeing With Transparency: Mapping the Privacy-Security Controversy Over Digital Contact Tracing in Vietnam

Authors

  • Dang Nguyen RMIT University

Keywords:

transparency, open source, privacy by design, controversy mapping, Google/Apple Exposure Notification

Abstract

Tracing the debates among technical experts across GitHub, social media, blogging platforms, and diasporic and state news media, this article examines a public controversy surrounding user privacy and app security regarding Bluezone, Vietnam’s national digital contact tracing app. Using controversy mapping, a method rooted in the actor-network theory, the article approaches what appears to be a highly technical debate among experts and displays the various actor associations through which the controversy is fought and social arrangements established. Arguing that the technical transparency produced through open-source architecture is incompatible with the epistemic transparency conducive to transformative politics, the article demonstrates the kind of work that transparency is made to do in a conspicuously nontransparent governmental context through an open-source architecture. It also argues that transparency can neither be relied on as a framework for legitimacy nor welcomed as a substitute for formal institutional structures that ensure accountable governance of public socio-technical systems.

Author Biography

Dang Nguyen, RMIT University

Dang Nguyen is a Research Fellow at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision Making & Society (ADM+S), located in the School of Media and Communication at RMIT University, Melbourne. She holds a PhD from the University of Melbourne and a Master of Science in Social Science of the Internet from the University of Oxford, where she was a Chevening Scholar. She was also a 2019-20 Fox International Fellow at Yale University.

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Published

2023-08-29

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Section

Articles