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US Demands Social Media Details From Visa Applicants (bbc.com) 378

Nearly all applicants for US visas will have to submit their social media details under newly adopted rules. From a report: The State Department regulations say people will have to submit social media names and five years' worth of email addresses and phone numbers. When proposed last year, authorities estimated the proposal would affect 14.7 million people annually. Certain diplomatic and official visa applicants will be exempt from the stringent new measures. However, people travelling to the US to work or to study will have to hand over their information. "We are constantly working to find mechanisms to improve our screening processes to protect US citizens, while supporting legitimate travel to the United States," the department reportedly said. Previously, only applicants who needed additional vetting -- such as people who had been to parts of the world controlled by terrorist groups -- would need to hand over this data.
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US Demands Social Media Details From Visa Applicants

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 03, 2019 @01:39PM (#58701590)

    Do people really just use a single email for everything? In 2019?

    Shit, I made a throw-away for any one-off uses that demand an email for whatever. There's no possible way I could supply "5 years worth of email addresses".

    And before people get all high and mighty, it isn't just the USA who are doing these shit things. This is "another brick in the wall", but the wall is being built in a lot more ways than this in a lot more places than just the USA. Demanding emails isn't the biggest problem, or the smallest either, but it's yet another.

    If we don't reverse course we are headed straight into a permanent, world-wide dystopia of mass surveillance.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 03, 2019 @01:47PM (#58701656)

    The problem here is that I have no idea what would constitute a "social media".

    Two years ago, I visited US. I'm from a visa waiver country so I only needed to fill out the ESTA application. No problems there. They had the optional section of social media accounts. Since it was optional, I didn't fill it in, but I did take a look at the choices.

    The dropdown had a bunch of choices, including Facebook and Linkendin and a few other obvious ones (even Google+). However, they also listed stuff like Github. Then of course, there was the option "Other". And therein lies the problem. I have accounts on several forums, including Slashdot, some small time phpbb bulletin boards such as Gentoo forums, WoW guild and so on. And bunch of bugzillas. Heck, does a good old mailing list constitute a "social media"?

    In the same vein, "list all e-mail addresses for the last 5 years?". You mean the ones I create for signing up for a service and then throw away? I factually don't even know most of them since they have a lifetime of grand total of a few days or something.

    I guess this is really more about finding discrepancies so they can throw those at you as an aggravating circumstance in case you later commit something nefarious after getting entry.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I guess this is really more about finding discrepancies so they can throw those at you as an aggravating circumstance in case you later commit something nefarious after getting entry.

      Exactly so. Al Capone Tax Evasion. It's not about some TSA goon trolling through your social medias, it's about creating more laws that everybody will inevitably break. Bigger book to throw at you, if someone decides the book needs-a-throwin'.

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Monday June 03, 2019 @01:53PM (#58701720)
    or American Express. All this just to apply for a Visa card is just too complicated.
  • How are they going to prove you have social media? About the only thing they can do is google your name, but if it's a common name good luck to them with that. Also what if they google someone's name and they get the wrong person? Google turns up around 6 names the same as mine when I google myself and none of them are actually me.

    • It would be super hard to enforce. But on the other hand, they likely already know everything about you because they bought all your data from facebook or some other data clearinghouse to add to what they profile first hand.

    • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Monday June 03, 2019 @02:24PM (#58701970) Homepage

      How are they going to prove you have social media?

      They don't care. They ask a bunch of "doh, that's against the law" questions and then if you are found guilty of whatever you're now not only guilty of smuggling drugs or working illegally but also of forging documents. It's basically a free felony, applied only to foreigners. I don't recall all the questions but I think one was if I was a Nazi war criminal, they don't expect anyone to say yes to that. They expect you to lie so if they catch you they have a charge to put you in jail with.

    • My name is super-common too. Googling my name (in Incognito Mode to prevent Google from showing me just my own stuff), shows me to be a YouTuber, Musician, Adobe Evangelist, an actor in Robocop, a member of the Federalist Society, a plastic surgeon in Hollywood, and a professor in Toledo. And that's just the first three pages, none of which are the real me. Or are they? (I *knew* there was a reason why I had no free time.)

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The NSA will just correlate the IP address you applied for the visa from with the ones someone with your name logged in to Facebook with.

      • Facebook isn't difficult about sharing data. As in here: https://www.thedailybeast.com/... [thedailybeast.com]
        No NSA intervention needed. Any homeland security guy can point at a social media post which is too critical and facebook will gladly comply and provide him with full account access.

  • by Jason Levine ( 196982 ) on Monday June 03, 2019 @02:36PM (#58702076) Homepage

    I've been around Slashdot for awhile (though I'm by no means an "original user"). It used to be that any proposal for increased government control was met with outrage on Slashdot. A proposal that the government should get access to someone's "social media names and five years' worth of email addresses and phone numbers"? There would have been outrage whether or not said person was US Citizen or a visitor. Many posters would have been questioning how long until this requirement was extended to citizens "for security purposes" and/or how long until this was abused to keep people out who aren't threats but whose political opinions those in power don't like.

    Now, though, there's a strong contingent of Slashdot users hailing the government collecting massive amounts of information on people as a good thing simply because it's not on them.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      It's the rise of the steam / mmo / walled garden loving generation. These kids have no qualms having corporations control or own their machines. Go to a site like reddit and tell them mmo's were part of the plan to get rid of software ownership and watch the downvotes cometh.

      To think I'd get to see the end of software ownership and windows 10 with drm in it with VM's and encrypted computing push VIA UWP just because the average stupid fucking moron got internet. What a time to be alive. All that shit us

    • I hung around slightly longer than my id suggests . I'd phrase it in a less friendly manner. I'm disgusted by the new measures and by the response to them.

  • by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Monday June 03, 2019 @02:46PM (#58702156) Journal

    First off, in general, this entire thing seems problematic. Further, the company I work for scratched a convention here in the US because attendance was going to be so low by foreign attendants - they were the ones who told me of this new screening in the first place.

    However, on to a logistical stupidity with with this requirement - I have thousands of email addresses. I make them up on the fly on my domains as needed. I want to register at Best Buy to buy something? Okay then, bestbuy@MYDOMAIN.com it is (where MYDOMAIN is the name of one of my actual domains). walmart@mydomain.com. On and on and on. For everything I've registered for a decade. Really, if I was a foreigner I would have to attempt to list them all? That is literally impossible for me to do, because I don't even keep a list.

  • We are of being provider of fake social media accounting for visa applications. Please to send of $20 USD for each of the accounts, and we of provide it safe and securely from our origin in Africa.

    Thanks be of to you!

  • ... this is.

    I don't have Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat, etc.

    [Disclosure: I don't need a visa]

    So, what I see happening here is a forced signup for leaky shit. Nice work if you can get it, and the major sites are getting it.

    The goddam social media started out as a reality game platform and is morphing into a serious prerequisite on governmental levels.

    That's so fucked up.

  • by ClarkMills ( 515300 ) on Monday June 03, 2019 @03:07PM (#58702362)

    If other countries did the same... Trump wouldn't be allowed to go anywhere...

  • First, from the article, it doesn't appear that they are demanding passwords. (Early proposals for doing this *would* demand passwords, but it seems like that was dropped.)

    On the face of it, it seems like they're updating their procedures for the fact that most people have a lot of their lives online.

    White I'm worried about is what they'll classify as "social media." It seems to me that it will likely be used to arbitrarily deny people entry when they can't find another reason.

    Traveler: Why am I being denie

  • People who hide their identities will not have trouble getting in, legally or illegally. It remains to be seen but I think it will: 1. backfire as Euro countries introduce reciprocating measure: now Americans will have to give their social info to foreign governments 2. it will cost US taxpayer more as someone will have to enter this data if the forms are not submitted digitally; potentially every border crossing and port of entry will have to hire one or two more people (not sure how many people that would
  • Will there be an official description, possibly a list, or will it be a vague concept so that people who didn't reveal they once commented on a story in their local newspaper are refused admittance?
  • It's not like I need to work with american companies but it have been advantageous so far. Standing in line for 2 hours in the cattle market that is immigration at Dulles have been barely tolerable but this is crossing the line.

    I have enjoyed my trips to the US as the locals are a friendly bunch but their government is just bonkers these days. So I won't return. So long and thanks for all the burgers.

    There are a lot of other interesting places in the world to do business, places that don't require the digit

  • What's worrying about all the commentary so far is that people are so focused on the legitimacy of the request (a perfectly valid issue, of course), but not thinking too much about how this will be used and whether there's any constructive purpose to it.

    One person's social media might be all about cat videos. Someone else's might pretty clearly identify their political or religious affiliation. And one might be more parody than anything else. How is this useful in enforcing border controls?

  • If someone takes their privacy seriously they wouldn't have social media, and they would use burn numbers whenever possible. This would mean when they apply for a VISA, there's nothing to hand over because no one is going to remember 5 years of burn numbers, which could easily be 60+, assuming they change the number once a month, if not once a day, which would be 1825.
  • by danbuter ( 2019760 ) on Tuesday June 04, 2019 @08:18AM (#58706360)
    You mean all those posts Abdullah made to Twitter about killing Americans might prevent him from entering the country?! Racists!!!!!! /s for the morons

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