KEY POINTS
  • Apple and Google's digital contact tracing technology is included in new updates to iOS and Android that will be released on Wednesday.
  • Alabama, North Dakota and South Carolina are the first states to publicly comment about using Apple and Google's contact tracing technology in statewide apps meant to slow the spread of coronavirus.
  • Apple and Google's contact tracing system is designed to slow the spread of coronavirus by tracking who a person has been in close contact with using a Bluetooth system that stores data on people's phones, not a central database.
Tim Cook, chief executive officer of Apple, speaks at the 2019 Dreamforce conference in San Francisco on November 19, 2019.

Alabama, North Dakota and South Carolina are the first states to commit publicly to using Apple and Google's contact tracing technology in statewide apps meant to slow the spread of coronavirus.

The technology is designed to slow the spread of coronavirus by tracking who a person has been in close contact with. The technology uses a Bluetooth-based system that stores data on people's phones, not a central database. When someone officially tests positive for Covid-19, the system can send a notification to anyone who was recently near that person, telling them to contact their local health authority and get medical advice and a coronavirus test.