New Zealand Airports Customs Officials Performing 'Digital Strip Searches' Of Travelers' Electronics
from the putting-the-'awful'-back-in-'lawful' dept
Despite DHS hints that foreign airports were falling down on the "security theater" job, it appears a few customs officials are more than happy to engage in local versions of "extreme vetting." New Zealand customs officials are way ahead of the DHS in this department, having turned airports into rights-free zones where nearly anything can happen... to travelers.
According to an investigative report by New Zealand's 1 news, airport customs officials routinely force up to two travelers each day to give up their electronic devices and passwords for searching. According to the customs agents, the program is designed to look for smugglers by performing a "digital strip search" on the phones and laptops of travelers. This does not require a court order, but the agents do claim to adhere to New Zealand's privacy act.
Yes, somehow the stripping of someone's electronic privacy still "adheres" to the privacy act. One would think "smuggling" would be routine criminal act, not worthy of "digital strip searches." One would also think some sort of reasonable suspicion would be needed to proceed with this, as compared to anti-terrorist activities which usually result in rights-violation blank checks being issued to customs authorities.
The data shows more than 1,300 people have been subjected to these suspicionless "strip searches" since 2015, with less than a third of those being New Zealand citizens. The majority of those searched are foreigners and it appears visitors to the country should somehow expect delays of up to five hours thanks to this supposedly random vetting process.
And there is no option to refuse this additional, highly-invasive search. As Techspot reports, travelers refusing to hand over their electronic devices can be subject to fines of $5,000. That makes it a very expensive trip, especially for foreigners. Extra delays, extra costs, zero privacy -- all in the name of keeping untaxed cigarettes out of NZ or whatever.
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Filed Under: electronics, new zealand, privacy, searches, travel
Reader Comments
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I'm Carcerophobic.
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Although would not surprise me if Australia had similar regulations.
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That would, at least, be a step up from the profiling most US airport security staff engage in.
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I expect the searches will be "random", not random.
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Customs officials: Not here they're not. Hand it over.
Traveller 2: I'm here to negotiate a trade deal with the New Zealand government. I cannot hand over the details of our negotiating positions.
Customs officials: You can and you will. Hand it over.
Traveller 3: My device contains corporate secrets. I'm not authorized to hand them over to ANYONE.
Customs officials: We're not just anyone. Hand it over.
The US and other countries are demanding the right to search the cloud-based servers of multinationals anywhere in the world. It seems like standard practice will soon be to travel with an empty device, and your data on your own private cloud server.
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/this might work in a movie...
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Keep in mind people like me are the ones they will never allow stuff like this to go that far, They don't want strong legal teams pushing back because employees follow the legal teams advice. They want smaller players to give up and roll over.
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"the program is designed to look for smugglers"
What can you possibly smuggle on your phone or laptop that you can't just download from the cloud?
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Re: "the program is designed to look for smugglers"
They more confident that are about that, the more they'll worry about the hand-carried device "hole" at the border.
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Note to the wise
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Re: Note to the wise
The only thing that sending it by mail will do is make it even more inconvenient to you when they confiscate it, since you'll have to actually go to wherever they're holding it to assist/get your stuff back.
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FTFY
Note: markdown doesn't seem to support strikethrough, so I can't highlight the deleted text, which originally read "or out of"
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They're going to have to run commercials to convince travellers not to download their data AFTER going through customs. Perhaps based on the "You wouldn't download a car" PSAs.
You wouldn’t download your own data
PRIVACY. IT’S A CRIME
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Still legit question.
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Good ol' days
What happened to the good ol' days when I could just show up to the airport, show the security guards my penis, and board the plane without any incident or infringement on my rights?
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Now everybody:
No longer a song a majority would merely sing out of solidarity with suppressed minorities. They are coming for all of us now.
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Message received loud and clear
'If your electronics carry any sensitive data, whether personal or related to your job, do not travel to New Zealand.'
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Re: Message received loud and clear
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This Could Never Happen In Teh USA
So don't sweat the small stuff. We can sleep safe at night, with that ultimate guarantor of our rights close at hand, under that pillow.
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I'm still hoping that Donald Trump will be revealed to be a still-alive Andy Kaufman.
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Re: This Could Never Happen In Teh USA
Sadly, I can't tell these days.
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Refuse pay fine
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or just in case
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