Matrix Posted August 29, 2019 Share Posted August 29, 2019 CBP searched 30,000 devices last year without a warrant Why it matters: As the number of travelers who are denied entry in the US by Border Patrol gets higher, it's important to take a look at the reasons why that can happen for you, even if you're a US citizen. It turns out you can be questioned about your friends' social media activity, especially if they may hold views that oppose the interests of the US, or anything that can be deemed as anti-American. When news broke in July that China's border police were installing surveillance software on tourists' smartphones, that likely didn't surprise anyone. By now, everyone is familiar with China's penchant for surveillance and monitoring, which applies not only to foreigners but also its own people. Every time you're entering the US, federal agents are allowed to search you and your belongings regardless of whether you are a citizen or a visitor and without a warrant. Their broad authority extends to your personal electronics, and US Customs explained in 2017 that cloud data is off limits, including social media accounts. That wasn't the case for Ismail Ajjawi, a Harvard student from Lebanon who was denied entry in the US after immigration agents sifted through his friends' social media posts and found they held strong anti-American views. The seventeen-year-old student told The Harvard Crimson that officials at Boston Logan International Airport ordered him to unlock his laptop and phone and spent five hours looking for objectionable information. The officers also questioned him about his political and religious views, and were particularly upset about the ones shared by his friends on social media. Ajjawi said "I have no single post on my timeline discussing politics," but his visa was nevertheless canceled and he was deported as a result. The good news is that he can reapply for a visa, and Harvard is working with authorities to expedite the process so that he can join his classmates before the classes start on September 3. Customs & Border Protection searched 33,000 people without a warrant in 2018, which is a significant increase from the 4,500 searches registered in 2015. Starting in June this year, the Trump administration demands foreigners who apply for US visas to give their social media handles to authorities. The FBI also wants to start monitoring popular social platforms like Facebook and Twitter for "potential threats to the US." All of this has invited criticism from privacy advocates like Summer Lopez, senior director of Free Expression Programs at PEN America. In a press release, Lopez says "this is a move so perverse, so grotesque as to defy explanation. Preventing people from entering the country because their friends critiqued the U.S. on social media shows an astounding disregard for the principle of free speech. The idea that Ajjawi should be prevented from taking his place at Harvard because of his own political speech would be alarming; that he should be denied this opportunity based on the speech of others is downright lawless." It's worth noting that while you theoretically can refuse to give customs officers access to your devices, that isn't going to make your life easier even if you're a returning US citizen. Experts say the agents have no obligation to allow someone into the country and recommend either carrying burner phones or not bringing any electronics with you at all. When US border officials testified under oath, the ACLU found that ICE and CBP "are asserting near-unfettered authority to search and seize travelers’ devices at the border, for purposes far afield from the enforcement of immigration and customs laws." Officials can then use the data from searches and share it with law enforcement in the US and around the world, but the ACLU argues "the government cannot use the pretext of the “border” to make an end run around the Constitution." The problems don't end here, with the US customs scrambling to implement face recognition systems at airports by 2021 despite the obvious privacy and security implications of rushing through this process. The US government is using the pretext of national security to justify these efforts, but according to the Office of the Inspector General, CBP agents are failing to delete traveler data and also admitted that some of it ended up in the hands of hackers last year. VIEW: Original Article. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tiliarou Posted August 29, 2019 Share Posted August 29, 2019 A f+++ing scandal... The fact that border control officers can look for that long without any f+++ing warrant on a private computer is a shame. The fact that someone can be judged based on things his friend said or posted is a scandal. You are not supposed to be responsible for every content posted by your friend. It's not because you are friend with someone that you share the entirety or even part of their political opinion. This shouldn't even be legal FFS... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steven36 Posted August 29, 2019 Share Posted August 29, 2019 3 hours ago, tiliarou said: The fact that border control officers can look for that long without any f+++ing warrant on a private computer is a shame. The fact that someone can be judged based on things his friend said or posted is a scandal. You are not supposed to be responsible for every content posted by your friend. It's not because you are friend with someone that you share the entirety or even part of their political opinion. This shouldn't even be legal FFS... Customs agents seizing laptops - no warrants are needed October 24, 2006 https://www.zdnet.com/article/customs-agents-seizing-laptops-no-warrants-are-needed/ Crossing Borders with Laptops and PDAs May ,2008 https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2008/05/crossing_border.html It would be different if the USA was the only country that do this but there not . A man was detained at the Canadian border for refusing to give up his phone password https://www.theverge.com/2015/3/6/8162337/iphone-unlock-border-agents-canada https://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/border-phone-laptop-search-cbsa-canada-cbp-us-1.4002609 As far as them collecting your Social Media info is not really new ether that went in effect in 2016. https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/government/us-customs-starts-collecting-social-media-details-from-foreigners-entering-the-us/ If they see you as a threat or even if you hang out in with the wrong circle of people your not coming to the USA that just the way it is . I dont give a that Canada , Russia , China , etc will search my phone or PC . 1. I'm not leaving my Country 2. I dont have any social media history to give them , if everyone wasn't hooked on Facebook like they was on crack they would of never passed this law . People done it too themselves by joining these sites. Telling people not to use Facebook is like telling a crack head not to use crack. 3. If you must have social media account to get a Visa make one but dont really use it for anything . what is crazy is so many people use Facebook that they was even able to make a law like this, see what trouble doing what your friends do caused now? 4. While them asking for your info for social media history is kind of a new law , them using social media to spy on you is older than Facebook . It been going on every since after 9-11 , Most of the security researchers that work for Google , Apple , Microsoft and Facebook are hackers that join the CIA hacking squad after 9-11 and ended up being rewarded for it with high paying jobs form Big Tech .USA Tech and Government are deeply woven together . When you join these platforms your joining sites that have ties with the CIA and NSA. PS: Plus after researching it seems that the media may of been jumping the gun, he was questioned for hours all kinds of stuff and they search his phone and PC they could of found something is the reason they sent him back.But they don't why he was really sent back because CBP is not allowed to tell them why. They only know that he was questioned about his friends is all , But that don't mean that was the real reason why. It could of been any thing. Quote The US government's probing visa applicants' social media profiles apparently resulted in a Harvard student being denied entry into the US on Friday. Ismail Ajjawi, who lives in Lebanon, was questioned for hours at Boston's Logan airport and ultimately had his visa canceled after immigration officials searched his phone and laptop, according to The Harvard Crimson. The media dont know no more than we do one is they wasn't even there and two is because its classfeied info and we most likely want ever know what really happened , Quote Customs and Border Protection (CBP) spokesperson Michael McCarthy said in an emailed statement that he couldn't offer specific details on Ajjawi's case due to confidentiality clauses. He most likely will be allowed back in the USA anyway. Quote Ajjawi, who got a scholarship to study in the US, returned home to Lebanon over the weekend. He and the university are working to resolve the matter before classes start next Tuesday, the Crimson reported. Source: https://pressfrom.info/us/news/science-and-technology/-316215-harvard-student-denied-entry-into-us-due-to-friends-social-media-posts.html# Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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