• unexposedhazard
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    2 days ago

    Wired is lost. If you dont offer up credible social media accounts or if you have a wiped phone, they probably wont let you in. These people still believe that the rules apply but they simply dont. There are no guarantees.

      • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        Make a fake account and just post random things so the government doesn’t think your lame when they check your social media.

    • Aatube@kbin.melroy.org
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      2 days ago

      You can tell that to

      Ryan Lackey has traveled to countries like Russia or China[;] he has taken certain precautions: Instead of his usual gear, the Seattle-based security researcher and chief security officer of a cryptocurrency insurance firm brings a locked-down Chromebook and an iPhone that’s set up to sync with a separate, nonsensitive Apple account. He wipes both before every trip and loads only the minimum data he’ll need. Lackey has gone so far as to keep separate travel sets for each country, so that he can forensically analyze the devices when he gets home to check for signs of each country’s tampering.

      • unexposedhazard
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        2 days ago

        Now, Lackey says, the countries that warrant that paranoid approach to travel might include not just Russia and China but also the United States

        Thats what he wrote right after your quote, implying that he hasnt tested it. Also this level of paranoia was always justified for US travel and he surely knows that. The thing is that the US is now probably worse than Russia or China when it comes to the chance for random people to be arrested. For political activists its probably equally likely but the survival chance in the US is still higher.

          • unexposedhazard
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            2 days ago

            https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/19/trump-musk-french-scientist-detained

            A French scientist was denied entry to the US this month after immigration officers at an airport searched his phone and found messages in which he had expressed criticism of the Trump administration, said a French minister.

            It barely gets worse than this. This wasnt even for public statements, it was private messages. The only difference between this and China might be the scale at which it happens, but that is kind of hard to track.

          • lmuel@sopuli.xyz
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            2 days ago

            Pretty funny in the US context tho, I’d imagine it wouldn’t be too hard for them to get google to “help”

            • CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world
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              16 hours ago

              The purpose isn’t to keep them out of your devices. The purpose is to have none of your critical data on it when they inevitably search/copy the data.

              A Chromebook is really easy to wipe/reset and switch between accounts. Plus they’re relatively cheap.

    • Bruncvik@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Last time I travelled to the US, I brought my old phone. It had plenty of text messages, a few photos of family and nature, and nothing else. They didn’t check it, but I guessed it would pass the “not a burner” vibe. Now I’m wondering, though, how people would react to me having no social media presence (other than Reddit at that time, which I accessed via browser). Not that I’m planning to travel to the US ever again, but I wonder whether there’s a market for perfectly inoffensive fake social media accounts.