Trump Administration Approves Tougher Visa Vetting, Including Social Media Checks (reuters.com) 270
The Trump administration has rolled out a new questionnaire for U.S. visa applicants worldwide that asks for social media handles for the last five years and biographical information going back 15 years. From a report: The new questions, part of an effort to tighten vetting of would-be visitors to the United States, was approved on May 23 by the Office of Management and Budget despite criticism from a range of education officials and academic groups during a public comment period. Critics argued that the new questions would be overly burdensome, lead to long delays in processing and discourage international students and scientists from coming to the United States. Under the new procedures, consular officials can request all prior passport numbers, five years' worth of social media handles, email addresses and phone numbers and 15 years of biographical information including addresses, employment and travel history.
Maybe the'll make the vetting retoractive (Score:5, Interesting)
http://thehill.com/homenews/administration/336038-white-house-may-have-broke-ethics-rule-with-retroactive-waiver-report [thehill.com]
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:SF-86! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:SF-86! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:SF-86! (Score:5, Insightful)
Trump has already imposed travel restrictions that have been estimated to cost more than $7B annually in lost tourism spending. These new restrictions will add to that.
More than 14 million American work in the tourism industry. That is about 200 times more than the number of coal miners.
Re:SF-86! (Score:5, Informative)
It's even worse if other countries start imposing reciprocal restrictions on travelers from the USA. What do you think will happen to global businesses that need to be able to send people around the world, if/when it becomes a nightmare to travel to and from the U.S.? All of a sudden it starts to become a lot more attractive to move your headquarters and any international operations to Europe or Asia, and reduce the U.S. to a subsidiary that handles only domestic business.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Meh, tourists are a pain in the arse, always demand access to the best locations, driving out the locals and seasonal employment never really provides economic stability. Always remember no matter where you go, people there are wanting to leave and visit some place else, you are not special no matter how badgered hotel staff treat you, you can holiday at home for a year for what holidaying overseas costs you in a month, tourism is one of the biggest marketing scams of all.
Asking for social media informatio
Re:SF-86! (Score:5, Funny)
What do you think will happen to global businesses that need to be able to send people around the world.
Less air travel = less climate change. Trump is simply attempting to reverse the effects of withdrawing from the Paris Accord.
Re: (Score:2)
You're right! It's all a plot to make Skype more valuable!
Re: (Score:3)
Most 'Obama' regulations, like net neutrality, conservation measures, 'obamacare', etc.were intended to have net positive impacts on the economy in the long run. And most of them would. Unfortunately, it's impossible to do a double-blind study on the effects of legislation and regulation on the economy, so no one will ever be convinced of the viewpoint other than their own.
Re: SF-86! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, it falls especially fast when tourists feel like they're being treated like crap.P Self-fulfilling prophecy much?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I really doubt the TSA agent himself/herself looks at a person's phone. If they are, they won't be for long. What is more likely to happen (or soon) is they plug your device into a computer and it "greps" for keywords in unencrypted metadata (or encrypted if there's a hex string pattern they are aware of), so they actually can look through in exported CSV file and various other types of all of your entries in just seconds while you're busy passing through an x-ray. KeePass uses a database file like every th
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Sub-divisions in Europe (Score:5, Interesting)
So now the proper functioning of my company is jeopardized?
Re: (Score:2)
So instead of the US making money off tourists, the US will become the tourists and spend their money in other countries.
And as for international tourism to the USA in general, watch the numbers fall. Our family won't be back, too much aggravation and risk
Far easier to go to Europe and Asia.
Naw, they're economies are going to crap too (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
so they'll come here because they have to to keep their jobs
No, they don't have to, really. They can work for anyone they want. It's the managers of the company who have to take care of its remote branch operating unless they want to shut it down and lose the market and the institutional knowledge and whatnot.
Re: (Score:2)
No, you will need to go there. So instead of the US making money off tourists, the US will become the tourists and spend their money in other countries. And as for international tourism to the USA in general, watch the numbers fall. Our family won't be back, too much aggravation and risk Far easier to go to Europe and Asia.
Uh, 'tourism' is not the purpose of such visits. It's to have conferences that enable smoother functioning in any company.
Tourism is a separate industry all its own, and there, people will decide whether to come or not based on a variety of factors. Of course, if they're Trump haters, they won't even bother, but if they're not, a whole slew of other factors will come into play.
This particular crap will have little effect on EU (Score:2)
Most EU nations are visa waiver with the US, meaning you don't need a visa to come over for tourism or business if you are a citizen in those countries (and vice versa for US citizens). Basically all of the EU has visa waiver status with the US, as well as a few other places (there are 38 countries total). So given that this is all about changes to the visa program, it doesn't affect you if you are from a VWP country (or Canada, which is completely visa exempt to the US, and Palu, Marshall Islands and Micro
Re: (Score:2)
They still ask you for your social media accounts with a visa waiver. It was still optional a couple of months ago when I last needs to apply for a visa wavier.
Re:Sub-divisions in Europe (Score:5, Insightful)
Your post-9/11 bullshit is already keeping people out of the US. How about you do something about it? Land of the free, home of the brave my arse. Home of the scared shitless. Do you even remember the '80s? US used to carry on about how the USSR was oppressive because you needed papers to travel. Travelling in the US is worse than that now. You need to present papers, and take your shoes off, and not lock your bag, and not take any liquids with you, and so on. If your name is similar to a name on a secret list, you're denied the right to fly and there's jack shit you can do about it. US used to carry on about DDR's mass surveillance where they were paying everyone to spy on everyone else as though it was some great evil as well. Yet you now wiretap all domestic communications. You've got your secret prisons where you disappear people, you've got your leaked torture incidents (although you seem to be getting better at covering that up), you punish people for embarrassing the government rather than actually addressing the issues that make the leaks embarrassing. It's just not worth visiting the US. You get treated like a criminal at the border, and you know you're visiting the most hypocritical country on earth.
Re: (Score:3)
In the US, when I got married in 1998 I left my driver's license in my car for my honeymoon in New Orleans, having to fly there.
They didn't even ask for ID at the time. They asked two questions regarding luggage and had an X-Ray machine. I was 25 at the time, but on honeymoon was only carded and denied entrance to a bar one time the entire trip. Returning home, no ID check.
Back then you could give/sell your ticket to anyone else and no one cared.
I could not repeat that trip today.
That was freedom. Oh, e
Re: (Score:2)
Is this the same Theatre Security Airport [wikipedia.org] (TSA) that gave us this bullshit ?
Airport Logic [memeblender.com]
3 oz + 3 oz + 3 oz = Allowed
9 oz = Not allowed
--
When did the USA turn into a land of wussies?
Re:Sub-divisions in Europe (Score:4, Informative)
I can still catch an Australian domestic flight without showing ID, without taking my shoes off, and wife a six-pack of beer in my carry-on luggage. I can still travel to/from China, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Philippines, Viet Nam, hell the entire region, without this bullshit about entire travel histories and handing over social media details. How much of the world have you actually seen?
Yeah, right (Score:4, Funny)
Thank god these nefarious terrorists have social media profiles under their real names, and have no clue about meta-data.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ne7DnmdilEg
No longer care (Score:5, Informative)
We can fly to Europe via Hong Kong, Singapore, Dubai and other transit stops, there is no need to go via the US or even near the US. International flights may end up shifting to Canada/Mexico to attract customers.
This of course also means flying on non-US airlines.
It means we spend our money else where. We, outside the USA, get to vote with our wallets, and we are.
Become isolationist, build your walls, hell even shoot yourself in the other foot, we are no longer worried, the real harm is to the US, not us.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
You do realize that tourism brings in billions to the US? Local business owners in San Francisco are currently losing money due to Trump's policies. Short term, most locals won't notice. If it goes on longer, the locals that are smart enough, will miss the foreigners.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
If it goes on longer, the locals that are smart enough, will miss the foreigners.
I don't know, maybe we could turn Fisherman's Wharf into a nice park where you can see sealions.
Re: (Score:2)
If it goes on longer, the locals that are smart enough, will miss the foreigners.
I don't know, maybe we could turn Fisherman's Wharf into a nice park where you can see sealions.
Yeah, you're going to need something to do when a whole bunch of your bars, hotels and restaurants have shut down because there's fuck all business for them.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Good, we don't want you faggots here anyway. We don't need the rest of the world, and it fucking feels good!
The rest of the world where all your shit gets built on the cheap then flogged back to you suckers for premium price because you can't possibly afford to build shit yourselves these days? I think you'll find it's the rest of the world that doesn't need you.
Re: (Score:2)
I on the other hand am now looking at the USA as a holiday destination again now that an actual adult that cares about security is in charge.
Security theatre is a totally different thing.
Re: (Score:2)
now that an actual adult that cares about security is in charge.
"Hey look at all this great intelligence I got about laptops with bombs in them. That's from an Israeli asset in ISIS. This guy. Look. Here's his real name. Here's his handlers. Amazing isn't it?"
Re: (Score:2)
Calexit (Score:4, Funny)
this won't impact the new People's Democratic Republic of California, will it?
Re: (Score:2)
I'd say "Texit" since Texas is the only state that has the right to secede... but it's a red state and their leadership is every bit as out of touch with reality. I swear, Republicans and Reality aren't even kissing cousins anymore.
Down the list (Score:3, Interesting)
That is great for people who have laundered their past by getting some new state to become their only "travel" document after a few years of entry and telling a good story.
A new passport granted by some easy third party nation will not be able to cover for past issues on another travel document.
"five years' worth of social media handles"
That will allow for a deeper understanding of a persons politics, who they fund, support, like and who their friends are.
Lots of images in a nation few people can get into? Why is that person in that nation over the years?
Posing under a banned groups banner, flag? A photo with a banned group?
No bringing a banned groups supporters into the USA.
"biographical information including addresses, employment and travel history"
That shows a person has a job, can support themselves while they are in the USA, what study they did. What they present is a real not a fictional story to get travel paperwork from their own nation or created to be given new paperwork from a third nation.
Lie to the USA and no visa application. Why should a person of interest be able to lie, omit, hide support for groups of interest or friends who support groups of interest to the USA?
Real people with any education, a normal work history and a normal life should have no issues with any of the questions.
Re:Down the list (Score:5, Insightful)
Really? Because in the last five years I must have created or posted content (as described) on, I would guess, more than three hundred websites. Of those I probably remember ... 10? 15? at most. I certainly don't remember all the "unique usernames" I've used. Do you know every place you've posted a Disqus comment? Where your facebook comments ended up? What if you don't have a facecrap account - but someone with your name does? You think they're going to be able to tell the difference? Or even care they're wrong?
All prior passport numbers? I don't know. How do I find the number on a passport that expired 20 years ago and which was inadvertently destroyed ten years ago?
I don't remember every single address I've lived at (sure, the ones I own, or I was on a lease, or lived at as a child - generally fine). Time periods? No chance. Nearest YEAR at best. If I were a frequent traveller, that info would be just as foggy. Did I travel to Bali in March or May? NFI. And the list goes on.
Why should the other 99.999% be effectively forced to lie (either directly or by omission) because some bureaucrat somewhere in the US has a hardon for trawling through personal data yet with arguably ZERO chance of unearthing anything useful. Do you really think that a terrywrist ISN'T GOING TO LIE?!
Re: (Score:2)
It's the person that can provide every detail without a problem that's your terrorist!
Re: (Score:3)
Re 'All prior passport numbers?" Most normal nations will be able to give that to their own citizens. Most normal nations keep their passports and passport numbers very secure. So that passport list would be an enquiry a person can be expected to make in their own nation given they have a passport in 2017.
Yes, I'm sure my country's bureaucrats can provide such a list for only $39.95 per person.
Re: (Score:2)
Meanwhile, of the legitimate travelers, not everyone has old passports, not everyone has social media accounts, not everyone has an address (yes, not all places people live have streets or street numbers), or one that you can cross reference (many governments d
Re: (Score:2)
The US has the ability to note any and all changes to social media over time. Upload an interesting image a few years ago, removing it in 2017 will just attract attention.
To "delete" anything would just remove that image from the public in 2017 on the internet.
If the image has been up for years, the US gov/mil has that funding event or supporting image and facial
Re: (Score:2)
Re 'social media activity on a different account. Or delete everything that could be incriminating. Or just lie and say they don't have one. " The US has the ability to note any and all changes to social media over time. Upload an interesting image a few years ago, removing it in 2017 will just attract attention. To "delete" anything would just remove that image from the public in 2017 on the internet. If the image has been up for years, the US gov/mil has that funding event or supporting image and facial recognition of everyone at the event.
What about keeping all their terrorist social media activity on a different account, one without their real name?
The US has the ability to note any and all changes to social media over time.
That's just not true. Facebook alone has way more data centers than the CIA, and they only keep the current data. If you add Google, Twitter and dozens of other social platforms, you're probably 100's of data centers away from being able to store all historical social media information.
Re "wouldn't be able to validate 90% of what people are telling you anyways" One lie, one omission, some funding, some support for a banned group, one image, one account is all that is needed to show a person is trying to cover their past and present a totally fake story to sneak into the USA.
How do you distinguish an innocent mistake from an intentional lie? Someone with 15 social media accounts can ea
Re: (Score:2)
An "employment history" is not required to show that a person currently has a job.
can support themselves while they are in the USA,
Usually, a statement from a bank is sufficient for that.
what study they did.
Oh, and how is that important? That's asking ... just out of curiosity.
Lie to the USA and no visa application.
The trouble starts when the (true) information given by the applicant does not match the (erroneous) alternative channel verification done by the
Re: (Score:2)
A person with a normal working life or educational history would have no issues.
People with a more complex social media past can attempt:
Lie and hope the US has no record of their past online support of banned groups.
Submit a totally different clean past and hope the USA never finds their real past.
Buy or use a totally clean set of papers and accounts. Too many images of people at protests, under flags,
Re: (Score:2)
7 years of such information gets you security clearance at companies that have military equipment divisions.
I went through that recently (there were also 20 or so forms, income proof for 7 years, etc.).
So basically anyone who can enter the US under this regime will almost be able to get Federal security clearance...
Re: (Score:2)
Are two people walking a life interviewing extended family, friends, employers and all teachers?
The US gov used to go back generations and down to the city and town level in person. No teacher or city or state paper file escaped been found.
The number of years would fit the average use of image uploads on social media. A person might have uploaded an interesting image at an event under a flag, or have been seen at an event and that image wa
Re: (Score:2)
"..request all prior passport numbers, five years' worth of social media handles, email addresses and phone numbers and 15 years of biographical information including addresses, employment and travel history.."
Re: (Score:2)
It does not need to be a deterrent, just enough to induce an interesting person to tell one lie. Then their paperwork can be stopped before they ever enter the USA.
Re: (Score:2)
Given US interest in banned groups the US would have the upload of an image in real time, a few more images over the history of the social media use, any comments, likes, support, all other hops or linked accounts.
The image would exist as uploaded, the account use and face would match.
An interesting person can try to lie or take an image down in 2017 after years of account usage. Its a bit late to clean up in 2017 as such sudden clean up efforts would also
can't they just ask one question instead? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
This plan is almost flawless, except on backwards day. On backwards day a normal citizen would answer "yes" to the question of are they a terrorist. A terrorist would also answer "yes" as we all know they do not observe backwards day. It would result in millions of terrorist flooding the country undetected one day of every year.
Tuck Frump (Score:2, Interesting)
USSR (Score:4, Funny)
In USSR privacy protects you?
Goodbuy ... (Score:5, Insightful)
...tourist industry. At least the hotel chains won't no longer have to worry about Booking.com and Tripadvisor.com.
and my trip is cancelled. (Score:3)
As someone who have been traveling to the states 3 times a year on vacation, I think it is time to say goodbye for now.
I was already somewhat reluctant about our upcoming trip this fall because of the laptop/electronics ban as carry-on, which got cancelled but now there's talks about it again. I am not putting expensive laptops and camera gear in checked.
The house has already been rented, but it will be cancelled tonight.
It's a shame, I liked to book the premium seats at Norwegian which enabled me to sleep or at least relax all the 10 hours on the flight, then one night after landing in Las Vegas and then driving to Arizona to go mountain biking, although the roads these days seems to have been deteriorating too much to be driving a Corvette, Mustang or Camaro. I liked renting american cars so that was a part of the "package".
It was good fun, but I guess I will just spend my money within Europe.
Every phone number ... (Score:3)
When I visit other countries, including the US, I often buy a SIM card, get a temporary phone number, now some orange dingbat in the US tells me I was supposed to have remembered all those phone numbers I've had over the past 5 years.
Oh, and I design VOIP hardware and software .... do you want ALL those numbers too? I can't remember them, is it a big form? lots of room
Don't you guys have an NSA or something to keep track of all this stuff for us
The Irony of Privacy and Narcissism. (Score:2)
No, I don't agree with the concept of asking for this information when crossing borders (mainly because I don't see it as an effective deterrent), but it appears that everyone is really pissed off and offended about people asking for their social media associations, as if you're really making an effort to hide yourself online.
Pro tip; It's not really difficult to figure out it's you based on the 927 selfies you posted last month as "InstaWhore69".
The irony of a generation of social media narcissists wantin
60 minutes to collect that? Ridiculous! (Score:5, Insightful)
The form estimates it will take 60 minutes to fill in. Only a very parochial American, like Trump, could find out all their travel, passport, and social media details within 60 minutes.
Anyone who travels for work, or lives in a smaller country near other countries, or likes personal travel, will take 60 minutes to find their travel history for the past year, or less. It would take days of work to collect 15 years of details.
I estimate that most of my work colleagues would find it impossible to collect travel details for 15 years, or social media handles for 15 years. They might not even remember where they lived 15 years ago.
This is an impossible task to complete precisely for most people. It is also impossible for the US government to verify that the person has submitted all the information asked for. Therefore it is both unreasonable for the applicant and wasteful for the US government.
holy crap (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, I do realize there are lots of people on this planet that do not travel much, some never even leave their country. My question is, realistically speaking, who in the US govt. thinks many of such people will apply for a US visa? Since even when talking about regular people, 15 years is a long time during which very very many travels can be done. And then there are some people, who the US probably wants - or should want - like scientists, researchers, engineers, etc. some or most of which might travel dozens (or even more) times PER YEAR. Now, just for a moment think about gathering information for 100+ travels for a visa application... Geez, I mean: GEEZ!
"Have you ever held a passport other than the passport listed in your visa application? If yes, provide the following information"
Well, I don't know how many passports people usually have during their life. Up to now, I have had a total of 3, from 2 separate countries (they do expire you know). Personally, I don't know the details of one from those three (I don't have it anymore, not even a copy) and it would be practically impossible to find out that data. Thankfully I don't need a US visa - well, not yet... this administration can seemingly have some fun with regulations
Another favorite
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
All of them, of course.
Over the last 15 years, I've lived in 4.
Well, submit them on additional sheets of paper.
Do I have to list everywhere I holidayed within those countries when I lived there, or only at times I wasn't officially resident in them?
Oh, there's a special list of countries where even a short visit, without any residency, will reduce your visa-bility score.
The rules are ridiculous.
Uh oh.
You could just about comply with th
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
It really won't change much. As you said, a chunk of people will simply lie or jump the border.
The rest will be able to simply skip the requirement. Eg: Because of my line of work and the country I came from, even though I half assed my green card application and didn't submit half of the crap they asked for, I got approved super quickly anyway. They have a huge amount of discretion in what they can overlook.
It would be way better if they didn't. Some people from certain countries will get overlooked on pur
Re: (Score:2)
And we will lock up every single one of the people who do what you describe, in a prison which will make them wish
they'd never tried it. There'a always room in prison, especially when you are housed in a 5 x 10 foot solitary cell.
So go ahead, motherfucker. We will be happy to show you some American hospitality.
for people who think this is stupid, it is. you can't just lock up people in solitary for that and in the amounts he describes and furthermore some people don't even know the name of some town 15 yea
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
That will all be done before a person is accepted for travel into the USA. A person will apply to be allowed to enter the USA. After all that work is done, they will have documents that will allow a person to travel to the USA.
Further questions might be asked if new information has been found or if a person tries to lie about anything as they enter the USA.
If anything is found to be wrong they will not be allowed to enter the USA.
Dont lie, don't support or fu
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
No paperwork for the USA, no entering the "airplane" and getting to the USA. Flying people around with fake or no paperwork is not a good policy and most airlines try not to do that. Governments tend to notice on a lack of documents on both ends of the flight.
Further questions might be asked if a person is interesting or lies but most nations have worked out how to guide
Re: (Score:2)
Why should a more elaborate visa application result in extra delays at the airport ? You get your visa before you travel.
Re: (Score:2)
The flights land, take off, depart, connect, people make their flights just fine.
Domestic and international travel has worked well for most normal people in most other normal nations that have valid travel documents over many decades.
Wealthy and poor nations have counted every person, in and out, and looked at every issued travel document.
A normal person entering the USA for a visit, education, to stay, for work is expec
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Ignoring what Jzanu said for a moment, how do you propose for the border agency to actually find undeclared social media accounts and email addresses? At least without giving the government the power to read every single email stored in the US on the pretext of looking for aliases?
Re:Easily Thwarted (Score:5, Interesting)
That means 82,191 passengers need vetting each day.
Assuming they each take one hour (e.g. each person can do 8 per day) and you have 3 8 hour shifts, you would need 3,424 people just to handle the traffic at JFK.
And we dont even account for holidays,sick days, etc, etc. Then there will be the supervisors, computer support, Managers, payroll, etc etc etc so lets take that to 4,000 people.
Now, Where is the money to pay them coming from ?
Make them pay you say, OK fine, that will mean competing airports in Canada and Mexico will see a rise in passenger numbers because costs are lower and thats on top of all those people who are choosing to avoid the USA anyway now. This will see thousands of people jobless in the Tourism industry, tens of BILLIONS in lost overseas revenue.
How do I know this, because I am one of a growing number who are choosing to avoid the US.
So go ahead break your country. There is absolutely no law that says the US can not become a failure.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
That means 82,191 passengers need vetting each day. Assuming they each take one hour
It doesn't take any longer than it does now. If they have a valid visa, then you let them in. If they don't, you send them back, just like now. All the vetting has already been done during visa application.
Re:Easily Thwarted (Score:5, Informative)
That's not how visas work. You can still get sent back despite having a perfectly valid visa.
Re: (Score:2)
That's not how visas work. You can still get sent back despite having a perfectly valid visa
Sure, I simplified the process a bit, but that's irrelevant. The point is that they aren't going to spend an hour at the immigration desk going through your social media status, because that's already been processed.
Re: (Score:2)
You're missing the point.
The "hour" that's been mentioned is a rough estimate for the amount of work that would need to be done to handle the visa application. It's not an estimated increase of the amount of time that it will take for passengers to travel through an airport.
There will be a significant increase in bureaucracy required to process all these visa applications, which has a significant cost associated with it.
As a potential visitor, having to deal with a more complicated visa application process
Re: (Score:2)
The "hour" that's been mentioned is a rough estimate for the amount of work that would need to be done to handle the visa application. It's not an estimated increase of the amount of time that it will take for passengers to travel through an airport.
Ok. I got confused by the example based on JFK airport. But still, there are two wrong assumptions: 30 million passengers are not all foreigners. A lot of them will be travelling on a US passport. And the "hour" is grossly exaggerated, because all you have to do is run the account names through a computer, to see if they are associated with suspicious behavior that has been analyzed previously.
Re: (Score:2)
It's a bit more elaborate because if you need a visa (citizens of some countries can get visa waivers) at application time you MIGHT be asked to give up all this extra information if they deem it necessary. It's not clear that every visa application will force the applicant to cough up all this information right away or only if you trigger some extra checks required tripwire (e.g. "name contains non-even number of letters, full information required"). Also note this presumably happens once per visa so if y
Re: (Score:2)
No one cares WHEN the vetting is done, it still HAS to be done and it still takes the same amount of work no matter when it is done.
It's not that hard. You make a one-time database of all social media accounts, passport numbers, and e-mail addresses, and flag everyone that you consider suspicious (they probably already have that). When a visa applicant comes in, you run their history through the database. Add the data to their existing risk profile, and continue with standard procedures. Maybe you'll spend a bit more time on persons that are flagged, but in return you can afford to spend less time on people that aren't.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Get a paper, with a stamp on it. Walk 10 meters (30 feet) and hand over the paper to somebody else who reads it as if I where able to falsify it somehow in those 10 meters.
The first check is done by an immigration officer. The second check is customs. Two different jobs with different responsibilities.
Re: (Score:2)
Your calculations are *waaay* off. Most of those people will be US citizens, which won't require a visa. The majority of the rest I would expect will travel on the ESTA visa-waiver programme, which doesn't require a visa.
Not to say that it isn't a terrible idea, but your calculations don't really add to the debate.
Re: (Score:2)
The questionnaire for ESTA has grown to such a volume that is is, de facto, a visa vetting process.
Re: (Score:2)
So it's actually a jobs programs, like Sarbanes Oxley and OFAC (both of which I'm more familiar with that I would like).
Now we see the wisdom. All of the people in the travel industry can migrate to the travel security industry!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Olympiad is actually the time between the Olympic Games so that would be the least of the US problems right now.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Having an interesting person on file in another nation when they should have been in their own nation or moving around some other nation would show:
Dual citizen with a passport they did not mention. Thats a lie.
Another travel document they did not mention.
Sharing or the use of fake documents.
People made mistakes in the 1960-90's thinking no database would ever reconnect be created and show their past support or moveme
Re: (Score:2)
Wow, you really drank the authoritarian kool-aid didnt you?
Meanwhile, people can just walk in at the North and South of your country.
The delay, arrogance and ignorance of US border officials is well known, and the economic consequences will continue to get worse, tourism is collapsing currently.
All of this, because you are scared of the remote possibility of a terrorist attack, you are literally in more danger of dying falling out of bed than by terrorism, you are even in far more danger from your own armed
Re: (Score:2)
They pose for images at political events and upload images. They pose for images in nations at war.
Their bank accounts show payments to "charity" groups that are the political side of a banned group.
They like or share or fund or support a banned group online.
Such information was usually collected in real time and can now be used to match a face to a passport been used.
Normal people with "correct travel document" have a bank account thats norma
Re: (Score:2)
How will they know if you're telling the truth?
I know how to make an all-inclusive list of all you passport numbers: generate a complete list of all combinations of characters, that form valid passport numbers in the relevant countries. They didn't say the list had to be limited to only yours, did they?
Re: (Score:2)
It's called "democratic election".
Re: (Score:2)
Ironically, none of this would be needed if the US could just go ahead w/ Trump's campaign era Muslim ban. All of the fear is of Muslims - original or converts - pulling off a terror attack. But the mere travel ban, which affects not even 10% of Muslims, was sabotaged by judicial runts. Since the US government can't say. 'We couldn't stop this terror attack b'cos these judges stopped us', they are forced to inconvenience everybody who needs/wants to come into the country.