The epidemic's cruel calculus has never been starker. In Sierra Leone, families are burying parents on consecutive days, a grim testament to Ebola's relentless spread. But amid the horror, a digital lifeline emerges. The UK has backed a new 'safe grief' protocol, a fusion of behavioural science and mobile technology designed to honour the dead without infecting the living.
Traditional burial rites, where loved ones wash and kiss the deceased, have become super-spreader events. The algorithm of contagion is brutal: one body, multiple mourners, a chain of infection. To disrupt this, the protocol uses geofencing and symptom-tracking apps to guide mourners through distanced ceremonies. Families receive anonymised alerts when a case is confirmed in their network, allowing them to prepare psychologically before the worst happens.
But there is a darker interface. The system requires users to report symptoms daily, a data stream that could be weaponised by authorities. We are trading digital sovereignty for survival. The tech is transparent: encrypted, opt-in, with kill switches. Yet the balance between public health and personal liberty is as delicate as a quantum state.
I have seen this pattern before in Silicon Valley: a crisis, a tech solution, a blind spot. The protocol works, but only if trust holds. In a country still scarred by colonial medical experiments, that trust is brittle. The UK must ensure this isn't perceived as a digital straitjacket. We need local ownership, not another white saviour app.
For now, the system is saving lives. But every algorithm has a cost. The real innovation may not be the tech, but the conversations it forces us to have about how we mourn, how we collect data, and how we remember. Ebola is teaching us that grief is a design problem. We must solve it without forgetting that the user is human.








