Forum search & shortcuts

Thinking of visitin...
 

[Closed] Thinking of visiting the US?

Posts: 13594
Free Member
 

Fair enough - if they said "DrP, you're on our watchlist, here's evidence you're a bad boy" then I would kind of understand (I'd be annoyed, but see that they were gathering/refuting data),

I'll log in and add you 😉


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 11:07 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Most likely is that those on a watch list or associated with someone on a watch list will be targeted. Next most likely will be those who raise suspicion at the security checks. Then it will be those who wind up/annoy the homeland security staff. Finally there'll be some purely random checks.

The only social media account I have is a dormant Twitter one, it's a good six months since I've even visited the site let alone posted (other than automatic posts from blog updates).


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 11:08 am
Posts: 5296
Free Member
 

Personally I'm done visiting the states til they knock it off with this new world order crap.
I spent way too much of my holidays over there back when I was married to a yank. Plenty other lovely places to go in the world and trying to explore as much of Europe as I can til the walls go up


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 11:12 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Indeed. To be honest, I felt safer in Morocco than I would in the USA, anyway. That *should* be ridiculous...

Rachel


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 11:13 am
Posts: 1892
Full Member
 

Over here visiting family at the moment. Came through Washington Dulles, two iPhones, Android, laptop no issues at all. Would have even made it through the Passport Express machines (don't need to speak to border protection) if I'd had a few more months left on my passport.


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 11:13 am
Posts: 7203
Full Member
 

That's a potentially worrying attitude to security from a bank. What corporate / personal / customer data are you likely to have on there, any or none?

I don't think there's much else they could do - they can't encourage employees to be uncooperative with a government official, no matter how much it stinks.

Employees shouldn't have any customer data on their phones - they are pretty locked down too, no social media etc. In theory though, you can access most of the network that isn't subject to 2FA.


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 2:38 pm
Posts: 6940
Full Member
 

The only social media account I have is a dormant Twitter one,

This place is the apogee of social media dontchaknow. Hermland Security are all over it!


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 3:39 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

This place is the apogee of social media dontchaknow. Hermland Security are all over it!

B***er! I bet chewkw has been onto his mate Donald and grassed us all. 😉


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 3:44 pm
Posts: 9837
Free Member
 

....Israel ..... Security...control.... etc

My dad was telling me with a fair degree of satisfaction about some of his Israel border crossings when he worked in Palestine.
"What is the purpose of your visit?"
"It is not Amnesty International's policy to answer such questions"
"Which Palestinians have you been talking to over here?"
"It is not Amnesty International's policy to answer such questions"
"What are you planning to do...?
"It is not Amnesty International's policy to answer such questions"
"Where have you been during your trip to the West Bank?"
"It is not Amnesty International's policy to answer such questions"
etc etc

The thing is, being the type of person he is, he probably immensely enjoyed it and wasn't particularly phased by the questioning. Must have driven the security forces mad.

I remember one time he brought back a variety of plastic bullets that he'd picked up. If ever there was a misnamed weapon then "plastic" bullet is definitely it.

RIP Dad, I'm really proud of you. 🙁


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 5:20 pm
Posts: 78537
Full Member
Topic starter
 

In theory though, you can access most of the network that isn't subject to 2FA.

That's a good point actually. "Sure. Here's my password. My account is protected with 2FA and I've left my phone at home. Good luck!"

It's an abhorrent abuse of power and a massive invasion or privacy.
People could have all manner of things buried away in their social media - personal conversations, intimate chats with loved ones, maybe you're homosexual and haven't come 'out' yet. "Sure, you can come into our country, but first you must show us the sex videos your partner has been sending you." [i]Surely [/i] in the Land of the Free this must be unconstitutional?

I don't see what it's going to achieve anyway. There are many many ways of sending communications outside of traditional social media that they'd never know about, you could divulge your Facebook password and not care because you're secretly talking with your terrorist buddies on FlapChat or some such. Or you give them credentials to your [i]other[/i] Facebook page, it's hardly difficult to set up a sock puppet account then like a few USA: Hell Yeah! pages and suchlike. Hell, you could sign up to a popular mountain biking forum and abuse their PM function. (If you're reading this and are a terrorist, please don't do this.)

I spend half my life telling people not to divulge their passwords to anyone ever. No-one has ever known any of my passwords (by me telling them, at any rate), not friends, not family, not partners. When I die, they'll go to the grave with me. I would have an exceptionally hard time in agreeing to this sort of request, it goes against everything I believe in at a very fundamental level.


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 6:09 pm
 jimw
Posts: 3307
Free Member
 

I went to that America once, about 22 years ago. Really enjoyed being there.
Don't think I'll go again now.

I saw an article today suggesting that I'm far from unique. Some US carriers are seeing a large drop in bookngs


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 6:54 pm
Posts: 2628
Free Member
 

I've got at least one work trip to the South this year. Journalist mates of mine have already been asked for their social media passwords on entry to the US. Fortunately, I have a minuscule social media footprint. in fact, this place, with its relative anonymity, is where I express myself most freely. But in case any US Government officials are reading this, I am [i]really[/i] looking forward to spending some time around God-fearing, Trump-voting white folks. Can't wait.


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 8:55 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

As so much is "in the cloud" now, blank phone / tablet, and just log into the stuff online when there.

Makes 2FA a bit of a pain though if they rely on an app you've pre-installed and authorised. SMS is okay, but outrageous roaming fees in US makes that a costly option unless your plan doesn't charge for inbound SMS (many do when roaming in US and not cheap either).

Anyway, as said, main concern really is the security of their data store. They grab all my private and social media data, but can I trust the guy in the airport, and can I trust their data store to not be hacked and the data leaked? In short, no.

That's even more vital for corporate data. It's tricky if you're a developer on a work trip and need the code on your laptop/tablet. You can encrypt it but you can be forced to allow them into that to copy. Commercially sensitive information. No way. An option at least is code is on a secure git server somewhere and you VPN to it from wherever you end up and get the code. Or even remote desktop to a machine to use and just use the laptop/tablet as a dumb terminal. Bit crap on a coffee shop / hotel wifi though (yeah, okay, insecure network but you'd hopefully be using VPN and a crap load of firewall).


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 8:57 pm
Posts: 66118
Full Member
 

DrP - Member

if they said "DrP, you're on our watchlist, here's evidence you're a bad boy" then I would kind of understand

I wouldn't- there doesn't need to be any evidence that you're a bad boy to get you on the US no-fly list. A colleague of mine ended up on it because he's of syrian origin and he has a slightly similar name to a "person of interest". That's it. I was going to say "that's the burden of proof" but it's not a burden of proof is it, it's a burden of nudge-nudge-wink-wink. And that's the sort of logic that runs through the system.

Incidentally, finding out why you're on the no fly list is very hard too, which makes the process of getting off it a proper catch 22- "show us why we should take you off" "Well why am I on?" "Not telling." We resorted to heavy handed favour-pulling with the US goverment and the home office.


 
Posted : 05/04/2017 9:06 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Northwind - Member
Incidentally, finding out why you're on the no fly list is very hard too, which makes the process of getting off it a proper catch 22- "show us why we should take you off" "Well why am I on?" "Not telling."

Each trip I got stopped they'd tell me nothing except the last one who said, "bet you're wondering why you keep getting stopped?" and proceeded to explain but also said he's not supposed to tell you why. However then went on to say I could use the TRIP service (Traveler Redress Inquiry Program) to get removed. Not that I was myself on the watch list but I kept coming up due to a name / DOB match.


 
Posted : 06/04/2017 9:19 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

A friend used to work as a supply teacher. One month his pay didn't arrive, on chasing it up it turned out that it had been stopped because there was another supply teacher with the same name and DOB who'd been convicted that month of child sex abuse. Took him a couple of months to sort it out - though the fact that he wasn't in jail should have been a clue.

So, fine as the systems are, they can be a bit of a blunt instrument.


 
Posted : 06/04/2017 9:24 am
Posts: 7630
Free Member
 

A friend of ours got detained last weekend at the US border apparently. Her finger prints wouldn't scan because she was dehydrated from the flight over.

They said she may have removed her prints because she was in league with terrorists.

She's a doctor of history and literature specialising in homosexuality throughout history and a lecturer at a Uni in London 🙄


 
Posted : 06/04/2017 10:04 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

from my point of view i don't worry about it...i have the wrong skin colour, have a beard and am a muslamic sort...they'll never let me in anyway so my phone and laptop are the least of my worries should i ever decide to visit Trumpland


 
Posted : 06/04/2017 11:29 am
Page 2 / 2