PDA

View Full Version : US Customs will read your laptop/cellphone.



GroobySteven
02-07-2008, 08:17 PM
As somebody who has had extensive searches and questions off US customs and Homeland Security in the past, I always travel with my laptop fairly empty. This would suggest that we need to also ensure that we clear our emails and browsers (or have an online email account).

Clarity Sought on Electronics Searches
U.S. Agents Seize Travelers' Devices

By Ellen Nakashima
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 7, 2008; A01

Nabila Mango, a therapist and a U.S. citizen who has lived in the country since 1965, had just flown in from Jordan last December when, she said, she was detained at customs and her cellphone was taken from her purse. Her daughter, waiting outside San Francisco International Airport, tried repeatedly to call her during the hour and a half she was questioned. But after her phone was returned, Mango saw that records of her daughter's calls had been erased.

A few months earlier in the same airport, a tech engineer returning from a business trip to London objected when a federal agent asked him to type his password into his laptop computer. "This laptop doesn't belong to me," he remembers protesting. "It belongs to my company." Eventually, he agreed to log on and stood by as the officer copied the Web sites he had visited, said the engineer, a U.S. citizen who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of calling attention to himself.

Maria Udy, a marketing executive with a global travel management firm in Bethesda, said her company laptop was seized by a federal agent as she was flying from Dulles International Airport to London in December 2006. Udy, a British citizen, said the agent told her he had "a security concern" with her. "I was basically given the option of handing over my laptop or not getting on that flight," she said.

The seizure of electronics at U.S. borders has prompted protests from travelers who say they now weigh the risk of traveling with sensitive or personal information on their laptops, cameras or cellphones. In some cases, companies have altered their policies to require employees to safeguard corporate secrets by clearing laptop hard drives before international travel.

Today, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Asian Law Caucus, two civil liberties groups in San Francisco, plan to file a lawsuit to force the government to disclose its policies on border searches, including which rules govern the seizing and copying of the contents of electronic devices. They also want to know the boundaries for asking travelers about their political views, religious practices and other activities potentially protected by the First Amendment. The question of whether border agents have a right to search electronic devices at all without suspicion of a crime is already under review in the federal courts.

The lawsuit was inspired by two dozen cases, 15 of which involved searches of cellphones, laptops, MP3 players and other electronics. Almost all involved travelers of Muslim, Middle Eastern or South Asian background, many of whom, including Mango and the tech engineer, said they are concerned they were singled out because of racial or religious profiling.

A U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokeswoman, Lynn Hollinger, said officers do not engage in racial profiling "in any way, shape or form." She said that "it is not CBP's intent to subject travelers to unwarranted scrutiny" and that a laptop may be seized if it contains information possibly tied to terrorism, narcotics smuggling, child pornography or other criminal activity.

The reason for a search is not always made clear. The Association of Corporate Travel Executives, which represents 2,500 business executives in the United States and abroad, said it has tracked complaints from several members, including Udy, whose laptops have been seized and their contents copied before usually being returned days later, said Susan Gurley, executive director of ACTE. Gurley said none of the travelers who have complained to the ACTE raised concerns about racial or ethnic profiling. Gurley said none of the travelers were charged with a crime.

"I was assured that my laptop would be given back to me in 10 or 15 days," said Udy, who continues to fly into and out of the United States. She said the federal agent copied her log-on and password, and asked her to show him a recent document and how she gains access to Microsoft Word. She was asked to pull up her e-mail but could not because of lack of Internet access. With ACTE's help, she pressed for relief. More than a year later, Udy has received neither her laptop nor an explanation.

ACTE last year filed a Freedom of Information Act request to press the government for information on what happens to data seized from laptops and other electronic devices. "Is it destroyed right then and there if the person is in fact just a regular business traveler?" Gurley asked. "People are quite concerned. They don't want proprietary business information floating, not knowing where it has landed or where it is going. It increases the anxiety level."

Udy has changed all her work passwords and no longer banks online. Her company, Radius, has tightened its data policies so that traveling employees must access company information remotely via an encrypted channel, and their laptops must contain no company information.

At least two major global corporations, one American and one Dutch, have told their executives not to carry confidential business material on laptops on overseas trips, Gurley said. In Canada, one law firm has instructed its lawyers to travel to the United States with "blank laptops" whose hard drives contain no data. "We just access our information through the Internet," said Lou Brzezinski, a partner at Blaney McMurtry, a major Toronto law firm. That approach also holds risks, but "those are hacking risks as opposed to search risks," he said.

The U.S. government has argued in a pending court case that its authority to protect the country's border extends to looking at information stored in electronic devices such as laptops without any suspicion of a crime. In border searches, it regards a laptop the same as a suitcase.

"It should not matter . . . whether documents and pictures are kept in 'hard copy' form in an executive's briefcase or stored digitally in a computer. The authority of customs officials to search the former should extend equally to searches of the latter," the government argued in the child pornography case being heard by a three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in San Francisco.

As more and more people travel with laptops, BlackBerrys and cellphones, the government's laptop-equals-suitcase position is raising red flags.

"It's one thing to say it's reasonable for government agents to open your luggage," said David D. Cole, a law professor at Georgetown University. "It's another thing to say it's reasonable for them to read your mind and everything you have thought over the last year. What a laptop records is as personal as a diary but much more extensive. It records every Web site you have searched. Every e-mail you have sent. It's as if you're crossing the border with your home in your suitcase."

If the government's position on searches of electronic files is upheld, new risks will confront anyone who crosses the border with a laptop or other device, said Mark Rasch, a technology security expert with FTI Consulting and a former federal prosecutor. "Your kid can be arrested because they can't prove the songs they downloaded to their iPod were legally downloaded," he said. "Lawyers run the risk of exposing sensitive information about their client. Trade secrets can be exposed to customs agents with no limit on what they can do with it. Journalists can expose sources, all because they have the audacity to cross an invisible line."

Hollinger said customs officers "are trained to protect confidential information."

Shirin Sinnar, a staff attorney with the Asian Law Caucus, said that by scrutinizing the Web sites people search and the phone numbers they've stored on their cellphones, "the government is going well beyond its traditional role of looking for contraband and really is looking into the content of people's thoughts and ideas and their lawful political activities."

If conducted inside the country, such searches would require a warrant and probable cause, legal experts said.

Customs sometimes singles out passengers for extensive questioning and searches based on "information from various systems and specific techniques for selecting passengers," including the Interagency Border Inspection System, according to a statement on the CBP Web site. "CBP officers may, unfortunately, inconvenience law-abiding citizens in order to detect those involved in illicit activities," the statement said. But the factors agents use to single out passengers are not transparent, and travelers generally have little access to the data to see whether there are errors.

Although Customs said it does not profile by race or ethnicity, an officers' training guide states that "it is permissible and indeed advisable to consider an individual's connections to countries that are associated with significant terrorist activity."

"What's the difference between that and targeting people because they are Arab or Muslim?" Cole said, noting that the countries the government focuses on are generally predominantly Arab or Muslim.

It is the lack of clarity about the rules that has confounded travelers and raised concerns from groups such as the Asian Law Caucus, which said that as a result, their lawyers cannot fully advise people how they may exercise their rights during a border search. The lawsuit says a Freedom of Information Act request was filed with Customs last fall but that no information has been received.

Kamran Habib, a software engineer with Cisco Systems, has had his laptop and cellphone searched three times in the past year. Once, in San Francisco, an officer "went through every number and text message on my cellphone and took out my SIM card in the back," said Habib, a permanent U.S. resident. "So now, every time I travel, I basically clean out my phone. It's better for me to keep my colleagues and friends safe than to get them on the list as well."

Udy's company, Radius, organizes business trips for 100,000 travelers a day, from companies around the world. She says her firm supports strong security measures. "Where we get angry is when we don't know what they're for."

CORVETTEDUDE
02-07-2008, 08:46 PM
Don't travel...do all your business by multi-access video conferencing. That'll fix 'em! NOT!!! Sounds like a bunch of NAZIs.

GroobySteven
02-07-2008, 08:54 PM
You can't eat a croissant and drink great coffee on a Paris boulevard (Vegas doesn't count!!) virtually!

You can't be sat in a go-go bar in Bangkok, sweating, drinking icecold beer while 4 little ladyboys bounce on your lap ... virtually!

You can't ....

:-)

El Nino
02-07-2008, 09:17 PM
These are signs of the end of days as we know them, and simply the implementation of a control-grid-society. Listen to the expert speak about these issues here: (free stream) http://www.nfowars.net:443/stream1.pls

youcancallmeclaire
02-07-2008, 11:57 PM
Terrifying.

Nothing is private anymore.

This especially sucks for those of us who dabble in legal grey areas... You never know when some asshole on a powertrip is going to interrogate you until they find something they can nail you with.

But... what is the point in even bringing a laptop if you can't bring your important files with you due to fear of your drive being wiped or your trade secrets being stolen?

thx1138
02-08-2008, 05:40 AM
http://rawstory.com/news/2008/In_search_for_foreign_intelligence_spies_0207.html In search for foreign intelligence spies turn to youtube, MYSpace, blogs.

howhardcanitbe
02-08-2008, 09:12 AM
bump

howhardcanitbe
02-11-2008, 11:22 PM
CNN did a piece on this:

http://www.cnn.com/video/?/video/us/2008/02/11/meserve.cyber.searches.cnn

bartholomeus
02-12-2008, 01:30 AM
check these out

http://www.zeitgeistmovie.com/

http://www.endgamethemovie.com/

its something imminent.

El Nino
02-12-2008, 01:50 AM
Nice Bartholomeus!

the1phinneas
02-12-2008, 02:54 AM
We all are becoming aware that the rules of the game are changing. Embrace change, and then simply keep a step ahead. Learn a bit about computer security, data backup, and encryption. It is neither difficult or expensive to get started and looks as though it's becoming a necessity.

Assess your risks, and consider the repercussions should the data on your laptop, camera, or HD become available to others (be it a thief, the government, or family member).

Start simple – know how to clear caches, internet histories, and recently viewed documents. Look into features provided within your operating systems for on-the-fly encryption like BitLocker (Vista) or FileVault (OS X).

Learn about some 3rd party volume encryption tools like PGP or TrueCrypt:
http://www.pgp.com/
http://www.truecrypt.org/

Consider camouflaging encrypted information in plain sight: Create password protected archive files of your data, and simply rename them to appear as system, movie, or mp3 files. Utilize your iPod or MP3 player's data capabilities as an external media sources.

If you're traveling and have access to a server, use your FTP site in conjunction with some of the aforementioned techniques, and store your data there.

For those with ultra sensitive data: Don't forget to wipe blank space on your drives. Unless you specifically do so, your data just may be sitting there ready to be retrieved with a recovery tool.

I am by non means an expert on this subject, but wanted to present you with a few concepts that could make your life a lot easier. Technology is changing every day, let it work for you. Good luck!

–Phinn

bartholomeus
02-12-2008, 12:44 PM
thats not enough the president as it is has dictator powers.... and they can break a code easily i believe. I know they did when they busted over 60 underground steroid labs this summer.... and they didn't have to break a code because a company gave the info. This is legal since 9/11, when they passed the patriot acts and also other laws that made it a possibility for the government to spy through communication corporations legally.

Hushmail the company in question gave out the passphrase for accounts to them which had around 16 digits.

I've also seen a video by a commentator where he was questioning a deal bush signed with the communication corporations of the U.S. In it he pretty much offers to subsidize(no tax) them in exchange for them cooperating with the government to spy on the average person. These companies would then log everything you browse, type, talk, etc. And keep it accessible for the government to keep tabs on you.

A very Unamerican act. the truth is the republic that was is dead, and people need to educate themselves in the matter quick or this fascism won't stop.

cheers.

subsidy - sub·si·dy /ˈsʌbsɪdi/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[suhb-si-dee] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation
–noun, plural -dies.
1. a direct pecuniary aid furnished by a government to a private industrial undertaking, a charity organization, or the like.
2. a sum paid, often in accordance with a treaty, by one government to another to secure some service in return.
3. a grant or contribution of money.
4. money formerly granted by the English Parliament to the crown for special needs. :shock:

Gmanfromthechi
02-12-2008, 03:24 PM
These are signs of the end of days as we know them, and simply the implementation of a control-grid-society. Listen to the expert speak about these issues here: (free stream) http://www.nfowars.net:443/stream1.pls


Took the words right out of my mouth. Scary is an understatement.

thx1138
02-13-2008, 12:16 AM
lawsuit filed: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/02/08/eff_alc_sues_homeland_security/