The US Government is proposing to require ALL visa applicants to provide more personal data, in order to track them online and via their phones. Would these measures infringe on individuals\u2019 basic human rights?<\/em><\/p>\n
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If you scrolled through this week\u2019s ICT\/tech news roundup<\/a> too quickly, you may have missed it, but there was a short news item from Breaking Belize News<\/a>\u00a0that the United States (US) Government may soon be requiring Belizean applying for a US visa\u00a0\u201cto submit their social media histories, previous email addresses, and phone numbers<\/em>\u201d.<\/p>\n
(Source:\u00a0 Independent.ie<\/a>)<\/p>\n
It should come as no surprise that the proposal has drawn deep concerns from several quarters. Organisations, such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the American Civil Liberties Union and even Facebook, to name a few, were of the view that proposed measures were not only intrusive and may not be effective, but they also infringed upon the rights to privacy, freedom of speech and freedom of association (Source:\u00a0 New York Times<\/a>) of prospective visa applicants and Americans alike.<\/p>\n
Same story, different day<\/h3>\n
Although the specifics are different, the anticipated effects of this proposal are not new. For example, when former US National Security Agency (NSA) contractor, Edwards Snowden<\/a>,\u00a0publicly revealed that the NSA had harvested large volumes of user data during transmissions over the Internet without permission<\/a>, people felt violated and that their privacy had been breached.<\/p>\n
Further, it must be emphasized that currently, the US Government only requires around 65,000 (or 0.05%) of visa applicants to provide their social media histories, email addresses, and phone numbers, when they are \u201cdeemed to pose a potential risk of terrorism\u201d <\/em>(Source:\u00a0 The Business of Federal Technology<\/a>). The now-proposed broad brush approach, suggests that every applicant is considered a terrorist, unless proven otherwise.<\/p>\n
Image credit:\u00a0\u00a0cytis (Pixabay<\/a>)<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"