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Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has long asserted a right to inspect the contents of the digital devices of Americans returning from abroad. Now, Wired’s Dell Cameron and Matt Burgess report that the recent increase in these invasive practices at ports of entry has caused the number of international visitors to the United States to plummet. They note that while most of these searches are basic, “where agents manually scroll a person’s phone,” deeper, tool-based sweep-searches do occur. In either scenario, refusing to provide a passcode means subjecting oneself to massive delays or even the seizure of one’s device(s). And while digital inspection at the border is not a new trend, it’s a rapidly increasing one. CBP’s own data shows warrantless digital inspections conducted at the border jumped from 8,503 in 2015 to more than 50,000 this year. This accelerating increase of warrantless scanning of digital devices at the border is attracting attention internationally and concern here at home. Four years ago we noted the need for respect for the Fourth Amendment at U.S. borders and entry zones. Sens. Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Rand Paul (R-KY) introduced the Protecting Data at the Border Act, and then renewed their push to pass this initiative. In between, investigative journalist Jana Winter found that CBP was spying on journalists. By that time, the Inspector General of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) had issued a scathing report on the privacy violations committed by its various agencies – with agents helping themselves freely to Americans’ location histories and other personal data. This was, the IG found, partly because the DHS Privacy Office “did not follow or enforce its own privacy policies and guidance.” And it appears that the agency is still not adhering to its own internal procedures in collecting and retaining Americans’ personal data. On the heels of the phone search story comes another tale of CBP overreach. Only this time, it isn’t about personal devices. Rather, the agency is looking for contractors to build a massive fleet of AI-powered surveillance trucks. Wired reports: “With a fleet of such vehicles, each would act as a node in a wider surveillance mesh.” This is a technical point, but its chilling philosophical ramifications are what strike us most. Node by node, our government is building a surveillance net to cover the country. This is all the more reason for Congress to use the upcoming debate over the reauthorization of FISA Section 702 in April to subject every element of this emerging surveillance state to long-delayed scrutiny. “We shall describe devices which appear to move of their own accord.” |
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