COVIDSafe first began development in late March, shortly after the
Morrison government showed interest in
Singapore's TraceTogether app. Development of the app was publicly announced on 14 April 2020, The app had a budget of over , of which went to
Amazon Web Services (AWS) for hosting, development, and support. The announcement was immediately met with concerns over the privacy implications of the app and confusion over its distribution. For many, it was unclear if the app would be a feature of the existing
Coronavirus Australia app or completely separate. Adding to the confusion, many news reports used images of Coronavirus Australia in their articles, and the COVIDSafe website linked to the Coronavirus Australia apps for a short time after release. The app launched on 26 April 2020. However, there were early reports that some users had problems with the sign-up. For example, those who entered their phone number during sign-up received the following message: "Error verifying phone number. Please check your details and try again." Within 24 hours of COVIDSafe's release it had been downloaded by over a million people, and within 48 hours more than two million. By the second week more than four million users had registered. Despite this, state and territory health authorities were not able to access data collected through the app as the health authority portal had not yet been completed. Accompanying the release,
Peter Dutton, then
Minister for Home Affairs, announced new legislation that would make it illegal to coerce one into submitting a contact report, even if a person had already registered with the app and tested positive for COVID-19. A
determination, titled
Biosecurity Determination 2020, was put in place, with the
Privacy Amendment (Public Health Contact Information) Bill 2020 being later introduced on 6 May 2020 to codify it. The legislation further governs how data collected by the app will be stored, submitted and processed. and the
source code for the app was released publicly. In mid May 2020, the Australian Chief Medical Officer announced that the app was fully functional. The next day it was reported that the app had reached 5.7 million downloads, approximately 23% of Australia's total population. On 20 May 2020, data was accessed for the first time following an outbreak at
Kyabram Health in
Victoria. By mid June, over a month since the launch of the app, the app had yet to identify any contacts not already discovered through traditional contact tracing techniques, strengthening growing concerns over the efficacy of the app. Adding to this, some estimates put the likelihood of the app registering a random encounter at just ~4%. Concurrently, the
Google/
Apple exposure notification framework began rolling out to users, with the
Italian Immuni being the first app to make use of it. In late June, following a "second wave" in
Victoria sparked by family gatherings, COVIDSafe data was accessed by contact tracers over 90 times. The app, again, was unable to identify undetected transmission. At the same time, a COVID-19 positive
protester who attended the
Melbourne Black Lives Matter rally on 6 June 2020 was criticised in the media for having not downloaded the app. Despite the identification of at least two further cases in attendance, to date no transmission has been found to originate from the protests. On 20 July 2020, the government was criticised for contracting out part of the app's development and support to a company with ties to the
Liberal Party. Mina Zaki, the wife of the
CEO of Delv Pty Ltd, was a Liberal Party candidate for the
federal seat of Canberra in the 2019 election. Delv was engaged after the initial release of the app to assist with development, In a 22 July 2020
Sky News interview,
Minister for Government Services Stewart Robert blamed the failure of COVIDSafe on the unwillingness of Apple and Google to modify their existing, globally deployed, Exposure Notification framework (ENF) to work with the app. ENF is an alternative, entirely incompatible, digital contact tracing protocol considered to be more reliable at detecting contact traces than competing protocols. By late October, the app had identified a total of 17 new cases. By 29 November 2020, the
Digital Transformation Agency was reportedly considering incorporating
VMWare's Herald protocol to improve performance and detection success rate. It was announced on 26 February 2021 that the app had been updated to feature state and territory
restrictions, as well as improving battery consumption on Android devices. Because of the ongoing technical problems surrounding the COVIDSafe app, the Victorian government developed the
Service Victoria QR Code app to augment tracing efforts within the state. Use of the app is mandatory for all Victorian businesses, organisations, clubs and events. Similarly, every other state and territory in Australia has their own QR-code based solution: On 2 December 2021, NSW and Victorian health officials admitted to The Guardian that the data collected by the app had not been used a single time in 2021, despite the extensive outbreaks and lockdowns that year. In response to the poor performance of the app, Federal
Labor Party politicians called for the app to be discontinued, while the
Morrison government began engaging with states to find a future use of the app. On 16 August 2022, the incumbent
Albanese Government decommissioned the app, shutting down remaining infrastructure and removing it from Google Play and the Apple App Store. The total cost of the app over its lifetime rounded out to $21 million, with $10 million going to development costs alone. == Contact tracing ==