It is possible for any situation where confession is confidential. I understand that confession over the internet of phone is not allowable because of the potential for the seal to be broken. I do not know if this is true, but it is possible to have electronic confession in a way that is secure. Maybe some bright Catholic entrepreneur could develop such a system for parishes where disease is of great concern.
I’ve never heard that before — that the reason internet or phone confession is not permitted, is because of the potential lack of confidentiality. I thought it was because there is no physical proximity. Hard-of-hearing people use telephone receivers within confessionals, if they are available — I’ve seen them. A phone is a phone. And the seal can be broken even within the confessional — a malevolent person placing a bug in the confessional, or even someone standing too close when the priest and/or penitent are speaking in a loud voice (which I beg them,
please, do not do this, speak softly — you may not realize this, but loud voices carry, especially within a quiet church).
I think the Church should reconsider whether actual physical proximity is required for the validity of sacraments (where the actual touching of a person or material thing is not required, as is the case with confession) and Mass attendance. There is very little in today’s world that cannot be done virtually online — doctors even do online surgery using robots. Would it be within the Church’s power of binding and loosing to say that, if necessary (being shut-in, quarantined, confined, snowed-in, etc.), one can fulfill the Sunday Mass “obligation” (that word sounds awful in English!) by watching a live broadcast, paying the requisite attention, and joining in the intentions of the priest? People watch the Mass on video screens in cry rooms — what’s the difference? Likewise, standing outside the church while Mass is being celebrated, if there is no room within the church, or if loudspeakers are erected to permit parents with inconsolable children to hear Mass outside the church, fulfills the “obligation”. If one attends Mass in a football stadium, they still hear Mass even though they are scores of meters away from the priest.
I know of at least one church that does have the loudspeakers:
(See page 10 under the heading “outdoor speakers”)