New Zealand Travelers Refusing Digital Search Now Face $5000 Customs Fine (msn.com)
Travelers in New Zealand who refuse to hand over their phone or laptop passwords to Customs officials can now be slapped with a $5000 fine. From a report: The Customs and Excise Act 2018 -- which comes into effect today -- sets guidelines around how Customs can carry out "digital strip-searches." Previously, Customs could stop anyone at the border and demand to see their electronic devices. However, the law did not specify that people had to also provide a password. The updated law makes clear that travelers must provide access -- whether that be a password, pin-code or fingerprint -- but officials would need to have a reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing. "It is a file-by-file [search] on your phone. We're not going into 'the cloud.' We'll examine your phone while it's on flight mode," Customs spokesperson Terry Brown said. If people refused to comply, they could be fined up to $5000 and their device would be seized and forensically searched. Mr Brown said the law struck the "delicate balance" between a person's right to privacy and Customs' law enforcement responsibilities. "I personally have an e-device and it maintains all my records -- banking data, et cetera, et cetera -- so we understand the importance and significance of it."
The term "digital search" is a bit ambiguous. (Prostate exam comes to mind) Is this really what search electronic devices is called?
sig: sauer
$5000 fine might be worth paying, depending on the circumstances, if the alternative is jail or loss of corporate secrets. Way around this is either an erased phone or an SD card with a smaller capacity stamped on it with plus an encrypted partition on the remainder. If what's on the unencrypted partition is innocuous, this should stand up to a casual search at least.
If only there was some other way to transport digital information...
The ability to force you to cooperate in a fishing expedition targeting you won't be misused. Because I have a cell phone!
so we understand the importance and significance of it
You clearly don't.
Nae king! Nae laird! Nae yurrupiean pressedent! We willna be fooled again!
Well it is a ""delicate balance" between a person's right to privacy and Customs' law enforcement responsibilities". The balance being do it or we'll fine you five grand and do it anyway. Balance.
Wanna buy a shirt?
https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
Burner phones are cheap.
My employer would have something to say about it. They would issue me burners. Or more likely have the local office give me a loaner while I'm there so I don't have to carry devices across the border. This just imposes a huge expense on business travelers in order to apprehend the dumbest of criminals.
I have a Chromebook and I run Crouton on it with Debian. Adding a ne user tat does not have that is pretty easy.
So I could just add a user with some pasword. If that where not possible, i would change the password to "pass" for the duration.
Or even better would be if they press "Enter" instead of CTRL-d to go to restore mode. Ir I do it myself.
That way I have a blank PC when I arive. Setting things back takes an hour., if that.
Same for the phone. Just restore factory settings. I could even pop in a cheap sim card and blank sd card.
Sim card can be had for 6EUR. Who cares they know it is in my name. It is not as if I am going to use it.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
One method which privacy protestors sometimes favor is wiping their phone prior to entering the airport terminal, and restoring it to normal after leaving... and with the ubiquity of encryption on smart phones, that makes it extremely likely that a forensic search would be entirely fruitless, regardless of the methods employed. So how long will it take for airport authorities to decide that a wiped phone qualifies as a refusal to comply?
Actually CBP merely request ID and legal status.
The problem is that when an aggressive uniform with sidearm gets in your face and states "Are you a citizen? I need to see some ID!" it does rather come across as a demand.
"Mr Brown said the law struck the 'delicate balance' between a person's right to privacy and Customs' law enforcement responsibilities."
Yes. A "delicate balance" wherein customs officials can do whatever they want to your device and slap you with a $5000 fine if you refuse to comply and you have no recourse if you think they're acting in bad faith.
In so far as dropping an anvil on one side of the scale is a "delicate balance," I suppose that's true.
Why not just a dual boot mode? Enter in passcode 1 and you get boot region 1 which can be a generic install with a few downloaded apps for cosmetics.
Passcode 2 gets you the other boot region.
Bonus points for some cheesy option that prevents boot region 2 from loading at all for some time window or number of reboots.
...Freedom of Speech. I am appalled by the NZed politicians if this is the way they want to treat travelers
Mine is one family that will continue to travel to Australia, when I can, but I have now put NZed on my "Anti-democratic government" list, until wiser souls in the NZed government returns to its' senses and quashes this kind of nihilism. And, I had such great hopes with their new Prime Minister!
a year ago, I was contacted by a recruiter in NZ, asking if I wanted to move there for a job. I was a little tempted, having gone thru a nasty dry period in employment here in the US.
at this point, I'm so glad I didn't move to NZ. this article is very telling about the legal culture there. I want no part of it. we have that same crap here and I don't like it. in fact, it sounds worse in the british-oriented lands; UK, oz and NZ all seem like they're racing toward fascism even faster than the US is!
glad I dodged a bullet there. that would have been an expensive move and would be even harder to back out and move back once I found out how NZ really is.
I'm sure the people and land is great, but I don't want any part of a goverment that thinks its ok to do this.
btw, I have a skill set that is in demand in nz (I checked). nz, its your loss. hope you think it was worth it, for the .0001% of 'bad guys' you think you'll catch.
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
It is important to keep in mind that NZ is a party to the "Five Eyes" intelligence-sharing partnership (the others being the USA, Great Britain, Canada, and Australia). Why that's important is that the agreement between them specifies that any intelligence developed by any of the parties is made freely available to the others, both in regular summary reports, and in full, upon request.
What that means on a practical level is that any data NZ's Customs folks uncover in their search of arrivals' devices that they decide might be of interest to any one of their three national intelligence-gathering organizations is automagically rendered to them. They, in turn, make that data available to the other four signatories' national spies. As Edward Snowden's massive document dump revealed, a key goal of the alliance is to enable the signatories to thwart the limits their own laws place on surveillance and intelligence-gathering activities directed at their own citizens and legal residents. (Appropriately enough, the NZ Herald ran an in-depth report on the subject in its March 5, 2015 edition. It makes for interesting reading, both because its viewpoint is a non-U.S. one, and because it traces the kind of egregious, systematic overreach that the port-of-entry personal electronics search policy TFS exemplifies specifically to the administration of NZ's National Party leader and (now-former) Prime Minister John Key.)
As an example of how the Five Eyes alliance enables its signatories' end-run around their own citizens' privacy protections, Snowden likes to point to a routine tactic that he, as an IT contractor for the NSA, personally witnessed every day: when an NSA analyst wants to look at the phone record metadata, web browsing history, email, and/or other "signals intercept" intelligence on a citizen of the USA who currently resides within its borders - which it is legally forbidden to do without first obtaining a FISA court warrant - he or she need only inform GCHQ (Britain's version of the NSA) of that desire. One of GCHQ's analysts then uses the spy tech that the NSA shares with GCHQ - often the exact same program the NSA person is running - to look up the requested record in GCHQ's database, and helpfully sends a copy of the results to his or her NSA counterpart.
Employing the narrowest possible interpretation of both countries' legal strictures, the search itself is not technically forbidden by U.S. law, because the actual surveillance and initial data acquisition was performed by GCHQ (albeit on the NSA's request), and that organization is not bound by U.S. statutes or Constitutional prohibitions on searches and seizures conducted without the shield of a judicial warrant. And the fact that GCHQ's analyst shared the results with the one from the NSA is, likewise, not illegal, for the same reason.
That kind of data sharing, which is based on the sketchiest possible interpretation of the respective nations' laws, happens thousands of times per day - and it works both ways.
Or, rather, I should say it works all five ways ...
Check out my novel.
I suck at maths, 5 ways times 5 ways == 25, bi-directional means 50 ways.
You still suck at math. Five parties sharing means for each party there are four others to share with. Five parties sharing with the other four is 20 ways. Since the reverse direction is included, it's still just 20.
Nicely put about the US but... Have you ever been to Mexico or Argentina? I've never seen a bomb detector in a McDonald's in my life. Mexico's said to be dangerous near the border, but in Mexico City I saw nothing like what you describe, not even in Acapulco. Also, Mexico's violence is predominantly related to drug traffic and plain old crime (kidnappings too).
Your description of Argentina is totally inaccurate too. Even though there were two terrorist incidents in the last 30 years to Jewish/Israeli targets, the only sign you can see of that is pylons outside of synagogues and Jewish countries. The terrorist threat is non existent.