On Fri, Mar 17, 2017, at 04:05 PM, David Fifield wrote:
On Fri, Mar 17, 2017 at 01:35:30PM -0500, Franklin Bynum wrote:
== If you are a U.S. citizen == The government has to let you in. They can, however, detain you for questioning and search you and your property.
If you want one person's account of what that's like, I (a U.S. citizen) wrote about my experience being detained at the border in 2013 for not answering questions. I was in secondary for around seven hours and in a cell for most of that time.
"Cool that Google gets a list of people detained by DHS."
Thanks for reminding me of your experience and excellent write-up, David.
Respect, +n
On 20.03.2017 03:42, Nathan Freitas wrote:
"Cool that Google gets a list of people detained by DHS."
I find it even more interesting that the requests were coming from a DHS IP range. I wonder if they still do that.
Oh what games one could play with this ...
Moritz Bartl wrote:
Nathan Freitas wrote:
"Cool that Google gets a list of people detained by DHS."
I find it even more interesting that the requests were coming from a DHS IP range. I wonder if they still do that.
Oh what games one could play with this ...
The part of my brain that loves mischief is like "Nice" :D
But on a more serious/on-topic note, I am leaving my personal phone/laptops/tech in a secured space that isn't my apartment. Given the high amount of border... uh, "weirdness" of late, it seems prudent to only take my travel phone (emptied, €40), a kindle, a cheap demo laptop (also empty), and a couple of USB sticks. This is my first overseas trip post-Trump, so this might be a bit over the top compared to the actual danger (loss of devices).
~Griffin
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