Visa applicants seeking entry to US may have to give up passwords, says DHS chief
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The Trump administration has vowed to introduce 鈥渆xtreme vetting鈥 of individuals coming from certain Muslim-majority countries. According to Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, that could include demanding their social media passwords.
On Tuesday, Mr. Kelly appeared before the US House鈥檚 Homeland Security Committee, fielding questions from lawmakers about the new administration鈥檚 immigration policies, including its plans to aggressively vet arrivals from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Sudan, Somalia, and Yemen.
"We want to get on their social media, with passwords. What do you do, what do you say?" ,鈥澛.聽"If they don't want to cooperate then you don't come in." Kelly stressed that this was one of just several ideas under consideration and mentioned access to financial records as another possible condition for entry.
But in a sign of social media鈥檚 far-reaching importance, his suggestion that US immigration officials should examine visitors鈥 Facebook and Twitter accounts sparked concern around the world.
鈥淭oday they are asking for our personal social media passwords, tomorrow our house keys perhaps?鈥澛. 鈥淲hy go to a country where we will be treated as second class individuals?鈥
In the past, concerns about civil liberties have derailed similar proposals.
The idea of using social media to screen visitors has been around since at least 2011, when a proposed that US Citizenship and Immigration Services 鈥渁uthorize certain agency personnel to access social networking sites for verification purposes.鈥 The policy was never implemented, .
In 2016, Customs and Border Protection to the forms that foreigners without a visa fill out upon entering the United States. The line would have given visitors the option of sharing their 鈥渟ocial media identifiers,鈥 such as Twitter handles, but not their passwords.
That proposal drew swift condemnation from 33 civil-liberty groups, who in a joint letter 聽as 鈥渁n intelligence surveillance program clothed as a customs administration mechanism.鈥 Several months later, that line has not been added to either the or the , the two forms in question.
For now, at least, Kelly鈥檚 suggestion that Homeland Security will ask travelers for their passwords remains just that 鈥 a suggestion. But it will likely face even stronger pushback if the federal government tries to make it a聽reality.
A taste of this opposition came last month. Amid the chaotic implementation of President Trump鈥檚 executive order on immigration, some customs officials may have taken it upon themselves to examine new arrivals鈥 social media accounts.
Trita Parsi, the president of the National Iranian American Council, emphasized this as one of his main grievances with the ban.
鈥: Green card holders were handcuffed, their social media was reviewed, and they were asked their views on Trump,鈥 the activist tweeted in January.