The Sunday Guardian

Here’s why it’s best not to travel with your smartphone or even your laptop to the US

- MIKE HARRIS

Febeeb MarcMaMarr­ch OOscarca HammHammme­rsteisttee­in ppatentten­nts theth fififififi­fifirfifif­irfifififi­rfirfifirs­t cciggarr-rollrollin­llingin mmachinchi­ne.ine. ThomThomas­omasA. EdisEdison­ison,onInc.Incc. isoorggani­zenized.zed. TheTh InteIntern­ternatrnat­ioationaio­nalna MoneMoneta­nettary Funundun begibeggin­ns operopeera­ationsions.ns Here’s a fun game to help you make new (weird) friends. In the pub, hand your wallet and your phone to a complete stranger. Ask them to pass their wallet and phone to you. Which item were the pair of you most nervous about handing over? Unless your phone is a Nokia 3310, almost everyone will want their smartphone back immediatel­y.

Your smartphone, however, is now a window into your soul. The apps on it will contain a list of everyone you know (their numbers and email addresses), photos of all of your close family and associates, your internet browsing history (stored in the cache forever) and data that could help identify your sexuality, your home address, and who you bank with. As the Open Rights Group points out: “The difference between your phone and your laptop is your mobile will often keep your entire location history – that’s everywhere you have visited from the moment you first switched the device on.”

I once had to advise a very important person on what they should do when visiting Belarus, Europe’s A tourist at an airport. last dictatorsh­ip. My first, and arguably most important, piece of advice was leave the smartphone and laptop at home. I knew this was a good idea from experience. While I was in Minsk my phone was disconnect­ed in the middle of the street while I was speaking to my then boss. I was trying to tell her that the opposition activist I was supposed to be meeting SaroSaroji­rojjinni Naiaaiddu, TThe NNigghttin­galngaleal oof Indndiandi­a,ia ppassessse­s awawaywa 70.00. FFrenchenc­chmanma ttriesie theth firstfifif­ififirfifi­fifirfifif­irfifirfir­sst flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­igflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfl­flflflflfi­ghtight aan aairplarpl­anelane witithit tiretires.ress. WWallt Disisneisn­ey’neysy’ CindCinder­nderelerel­laellaa relereleas­leasedased acroacross­ross thehhe U..S.S in Belarus had been found dead. Later that evening, I made a second mistake and left my phone in the hotel room (it had been disconnect­ed anyhow). When I returned, the phone didn’t switch on and there was a hairline crack behind the battery. The KGB love to screw with you.

Now the US is copying the tactics of the dictators. The new Trump administra­tion is flexing its muscle at the border and getting people like you to hand over their smartphone­s to US Homeland Security officials. In January this year, NASA scientist Sidd Bikkannava­r was forced to hand over his work mobile phone, even though it was technicall­y a US government device. As technology commentato­r Quincy Larson notes on his blog, commercial­ly available software can clone your contacts, photos and the passwords to every account you hold (from email to social media accounts) in a matter of minutes. Once your data is cloned, it is no longer private.

This is just the start. Trump appointee John Kelly, the Secretary of Homeland Security, told the US Congress that “extreme vetting” for arrivals to the US may get even more extreme. Plans under considerat­ion include forcing people to hand over their social media passwords and refuse them entry to America if they decline to do so.

Not to be outdone, Republican congressma­n Jim Banks is introducin­g a bill that would require US officials to trawl through the social media activity of any foreign citizen MarcMaMarc­hrc 4MaMarcMar­chrc who wants to visit the US. Banks’ plan would require the American Department of Homeland Security to audit the social media accounts of the 67 million foreign travellers to the US every year. It isn’t clear whether his plan is even workable.

Currently, the primary target of this state-sanctioned harassment are the citizens of seven majorityMu­slim countries — Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. Anyone from any country who is currently a refugee is also banned from the US for the next four months, and all Syrian refugees are barred indefinite­ly.

With US immigratio­n officials given a broad remit to discrimina­te, mission creep will begin. Once the seizure of smartphone­s is normalised, it will become increasing­ly commonplac­e. The reason is simple: the more random data you can acquire, the more likely you are to stumble across social media connection­s that can help you map the entirety of all connection­s online. It also gives a Trump administra­tion which is threatenin­g the press and journalist­s a highly effective way to track journalist­s’ sources as they travel in and out of the US. THE INDEPENDEN­T Pr i n t e d a n d d i s t r i b u t e d by P r essReader P r e s s R e a d e r . c o m + 1 6 0 4 2 7 8 4 6 0 4 • ORIGINAL COPY • ORIGINAL COPY • ORIGINAL COPY • ORIGINAL COPY • ORIGINAL COPY • ORIGINAL COPY • COPYR I G H T A N D P R OT E C T E D B Y A P P L I C A B L E L AW

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