Slashdot Mirror


New Bill To Rein In DHS Laptop Seizures

twigles writes with news of a new proposed bill that seeks to curtail DHS's power to search and seize laptops at the border without suspicion of wrongdoing. Here is Sen. Feingold's press release on the bill. The new bill has more privacy-protecting safeguards than the previous one, which we discussed last month. "The Travelers Privacy Protection Act, a bill written by US Senators Russ Feingold, D-Wis., and Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., and Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., would allow border agents to search electronic devices only if they had reasonable suspicions of wrongdoing. In addition, the legislation would limit the length of time that a device could be out of its owner's possession to 24 hours, after which the search becomes a seizure, requiring probable cause."

19 of 311 comments (clear)

  1. No, no good enough. by Animats · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Probable cause required after 24 hours? No. Probable cause must be required before search.

    1. Re:No, no good enough. by Celarnor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Think in computer terms. You can't block spam, spam, and only spam. Sometimes you have to block non-spam to catch most of the spam, or you block nothing but the most obvious spam, and still have a trashed inbox.

      The two are nothing alike.

      When you're filtering spam, you aren't dealing with a person's personal belongings worth at the very least a few dollars plus the contents of the hard drive, which is priceless.

      You aren't dealing with something that makes or breaks someones livelihood, you're dealing with something with an email. The two are absolutely nothing alike,and while I'll accept a high false positive rate and a high success rate with spam filtering, I'm not going to accept a high false positive rate with a system that deprives me of physical property and my livelihood for at least 24 hours without any reason.

    2. Re:No, no good enough. by martin-boundary · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How about probable cause after 3 minutes? Most people don't need more than that...

    3. Re:No, no good enough. by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sweet Jesus on a flying carpet, "non-citizens have basically no rights and if they want in they have to do what we tell them"?!

      How's your sister / wife, Dwayne? Feel free to come past the 19th Century any time. You do realise Apartheid is over, and you can no longer buy slaves? Your Constitution protects PEOPLE, not citizens. THIS IS THE CRUX OF THE MATTER.

      I have never seen a more ignorant response on /. in my life.

      If you're trolling, I applaud you. You are extremely good at being a dick.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
  2. Mod parent up. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's a bit like saying the police can break down my door and search my apartment for 24 hours before I can complain.

    I think I speak for all of us when I say: FUCK NO.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    1. Re:Mod parent up. by davester666 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is funny.

      Didn't FISA get revised just this year (combined with giving immunity to the telephone companies involved with illegal wiretapping), so that the NSA can wait up to two weeks AFTER beginning to wiretap a phone line, to apply for the warrant to do the wiretapping? Even though there are rubber-stamp FISA judges available on speed-dial 24/7/365. All you need to do is make a long-distance phone call to a person and/or a phone number that somebody thinks is associated with terrorism (no evidence required for this belief!).

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    2. Re:Mod parent up. by Ian+Alexander · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Consider that, as it stands, they're under no requirement to give you anything back at the border, ever, and I'd say a 24-hour cutoff before they needed a warrant to seize your stuff would be better than nothing.

    3. Re:Mod parent up. by davester666 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, that is true. But they also altered the law for calls entirely within the US. That long distance call you made, that somebody decided, entirely without any actual evidence, that was to a phone number similar to somebody that is suspected of being linked to a terrorist (which pretty much covers EVERYBODY), that they started wiretapping your phone for, without a warrant. They can share ALL the calls you make (including entirely within the US) with local and state police and the FBI. Without a warrant.

      And once they finally have to apply for the warrant, if the rubber stamp FISA court somehow decides not to authorize it, the NSA can appeal, and keep wiretapping your line for another 30 days, still without a warrant, until another FISA court has to hear the appeal and may finally deny the warrant, and they have to take the wiretap off.

      But then the President just hands out a letter (do we even know if the gov't is keeping records of their secret wiretapping?) or just indicates in some way to keep wiretapping you anyway, in the name of national security. Like he has already been doing for years.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    4. Re:Mod parent up. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I realize this.

      I also think it's a blatant violation of the Bill of Rights.

      I realize said Bill of Rights is often trashed by our government. Is there something else I don't know about the rationale for treating me as anything other than a citizen at the border?

      To draw a completely inappropriate analogy, it's like Spore's DRM. Sure, five activations is better than three. I still say any game telling me how many times I can install it on my own computer should not be allowed, and I'm quite offended at the attempt to throw me a bone.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  3. Where are the Republicans? by pete-classic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why on Earth isn't this bill co-sponsored by a Republican? Have they stopped even paying lip-service to freedom?

    Ten years ago the Republican party had two things going for it, fiscal conservatism and a strong stance on freedom. What happened? (It would be easy to say, "George Bush", but I refuse to believe that he could have done it single handedly.)

    -Peter

  4. Re:still won't convince me to visit the usa by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 4, Insightful

    government sponsored theft of your property. fuck that.

    Taxes?

    No Highway for you!

  5. To take or not to take? by kaos07 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is particularly relevant to me as I'm travelling to the US next month. I'll be there for a couple of months so taking my laptop is kind of a necessity but really don't know what the hassle's going to be like at the border and whether it's worth it. I'm not particularly worried about them spying on my files since there isn't anything sensitive there and if there was, I could upload it onto a secure server and then download it once in the States but even that is a somewhat depressing course of action to take when entering the "land of the free".

    It's almost as if they don't want visitors, tourists, skilled workers?

  6. Re:More than a pita by Kamokazi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unless you're hiking in the wilderness (in which case you probably didn't need it too badly), you will have a hotel address your laptop can be shipped to rather easily.

    IANAL, but probable cause is much more than just reasonable suspicion. Soemthing along the lines of having other evidence against the person than what you gathered simply by noticing something at customs.

    --
    As our way of thanking you for your positive contributions to Slashdot, you are eligible to disable Slashdot 2.0.
  7. Re:Not necessarily by plasmacutter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm such a leech.

    I mean.. i ate right, have never been overweight, got plenty of exercise, and was diagnosed with crohns at age 17.

    Now im out of college, unable to get insurance of any kind, and suffering from excruciating pain, chronic diarrhea, and lethargy approaching narcolepsy, all because I can't get 2 perscriptions which would make it all go away

    This is because of authoritarians like you who believe in "guilty until proven innocent"

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  8. I Do Not Understand by LuYu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe it is just me, but I do not see how Congress is supposed to be passing bills or laws that give people back their Constitutionally guaranteed Rights . The Fourth Amendment protections are above the law, and the DHS is violating the Constitution -- the origin of all law in the US -- by practising these seizures. Why is a law necessary to prevent the DHS from violating the Father of All Law, the fundamental document without which the US could not claim to be a "Free Country"?

    --
    All data is speech. All speech is Free.
    1. Re:I Do Not Understand by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You really want to know?

      It's because your Bill of Rights has been re-tasked.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
  9. Thats the problem here by Shivetya · · Score: 3, Insightful

    they are not passing a bill to give us our rights back. They are using "code" words in a pretty phrase to convince they are.

    This is very typical of Congress. Label something "bill of X rights" "for the children" etc and the media and ignorant lap it up.

    No, what they really have done is to create a law to protect DHS and give DHS the right to seize your equipment for 24 hours.

    The simply codified what they have been doing to protect another Federal Agency. Par for the course with this Congress

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  10. Re:More than a pita by YttriumOxide · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem with travelling to the US is that they don't even let you past the gates without a valid address. I discovered this on my first visit there several years ago. I was staying in a hotel in Connecticut, but didn't know the address (my colleagues would pick me up from the airport and take me there), but I flew in to Los Angeles and was to transfer to a domestic flight to get to CT. I was tied up at the checkpoint for about 4 hours while they tried (and tried and tried and tried) to call the CT office to make sure I was "legit" and to get the address of the hotel. It didn't occur to them that due to the timezone difference, everyone had already gone home for the day and the cleaning staff generally don't answer people's office phones. All this time, they just left me waiting around, not allowed through.
    Eventually, they came to me and asked for an number back in my home country (Australia at the time) and after waiting another hour for someone to get in to the office there (don't forget the joy of timezones), they finally got through to someone, got the cell number of a guy in CT, woke him up (it was pretty late by that point), got the address and then let me through. NEVER again will I travel to the US without having an address written down somewhere!

    Actually, thinking about it, never again will I travel to the US unless COMPLETELY necessary. If I need to have a meeting with my colleagues from the US again, they can bloody well fly over here to Germany (where I now live/work).

    --
    My book about LSD and Self-Discovery
    Also on facebook as: DroppingAcidDaleBewan
  11. Re:Not necessarily by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ultimately only you are responsible for your own health and happiness. If you're not willing to do whatever it takes to secure those things for yourself, do not blame others. It's your choice not to act.

    And that, in a nutshell, is why a lot of people can't stop scratching their heads about the way things are done in the good ol' US of A.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying it's immoral or wrong in any way, just that a good chunk of the rest of the western world feels there's such a thing as the common good which supercedes the individual.

    And to put this in economical terms, what's the cost/benefit of providing the GGP with socially funded medicine, which most likely means he'll be able to function as a tax-paying, consuming, creditcard-using citizen instead of having to sit at home being a drain on society through other channels? In many cases a short-term investment in people that have fallen "through the system", so to speak, can make a huge difference both to their own welfare as well as their ability to contribute to society as opposed to having to depend on it.

    --

    People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.