The Taiwanese startup Bitmark, which participated in a government-sponsored hackathon in May, was unable to promote its blockchain solution due to Appleâs pandemic moderation policy.Â
âWe were trying to essentially build a weather forecast but for public health,â said Bitmark CEO Sean Moss-Pultz. âIt allowed people to volunteer their symptoms and what they are trying to do to get better, and connect that to public data from public health offices.â
Precisely because the World Health Organization excludes Taiwan, the small Asian nation has developed a unique set of software tools for combatting COVID-19. However, the Apple store only lists health apps published by government entities or nonprofits. This means the small nationâs startup community has limited access to mobile device users. (Apple did not respond to requests for comment by press time.)
According to a report by the analytics and accelerator company AppWorks, there are now roughly 112 blockchain startups in Taiwan, including the supply chain management startup BSOS, which received an investment from Taiwanâs National Development Fund earlier this year.
Read more: Austrian Government Funds Development of Blockchain-Based COVID-19 App
âWhat are the next growth opportunities for blockchain? Everyone has different interpretations and expectations,â the AppWorks report said. âHowever, currently, conversations are mostly centered around the pandemic, with criticisms mainly targeted at the limitations and failures of centralization.â
Moss-Pultz said his firm experienced those limitations firsthand. The mainstream app stores would only accept the resulting app, called Autonomy, if the Taiwanese government itself released the mobile app.
âPeople all around the world are getting their apps blocked,â Moss-Pultz said. âWe spent most of June trying to figure out what type of strategy we could have. ⦠Most likely weâre just going to [release Autonomy] as a web thing.â
Apple and Google are hardly the only tech giants defining the public pandemic narratives. Amazon, for example, forced bitcoin advocate Knut Svanholm to remove a brief mention of the coronavirus from his self-published book in order to distribute it through Kindle in April.Â
As the Svanholm incident illustrated, moderating health tools during a pandemic without resulting in blunt-force censorship is a difficult task to automate.
Colin Steil, co-founder of the Taiwanese blockchain startup Cartesi, said tech companies âalways have to proceed with cautionâ to avoid their software being âused to cause unrest or disrupt in political issues.âÂ
Internet giants can be accused of censorship regardless of whether they moderate content. Companies like Facebook and Twitter are both heavily criticized for rampant misinformation campaigns on their platforms, although they took radically different approaches to moderation. (Facebook has since recanted and said it will change its policies, due to public pressure.) Critics seem to consider the opposite of censorship to be, not digital anarchy, but consistently high-quality moderation.Â
Read more: Social Media Bans âHighlight the Profound Censorship on Web 2.0â
Steil said that compared to stringent but relatively healthy Taiwan, American leaders were âstalled for many reasonsâ in reacting to the pandemic and âreliant on tech companiesâ to offer solutions.Â
âTaiwan took the pandemic very seriously due to its prior experience with viruses, and reacted in a method that used whatever tools and tech they had available,â Steil said, highlighting the contrast in public policies.Â
Blockchain Commons founder Christopher Allen, who collaborated with Bitmark at the May hackathon and is an advocate for decentralized identity tech, said âgood actorsâ at Silicon Valleyâs tech giants are often âstymiedâ by company objectives.Â
So far, American tech companies dominate public services, sometimes even running servers for government agencies, he said, in ways other private companies cannot compete with.
âTheir strategies have been to vertically integrate and limit other people,â Allen said of companies like Google, Facebook and Apple. âI donât think their intent is malicious in any fashion, but the nature of keeping competition out has a potential harm.â