8 comments

  • vsgherzi a day ago

    Absolutely ridiculous law. I pray to God the US does not follow. That being said there is some strange law trickery where passwords and pins are safe but biomentrics aren't. We should just standardize it in the US.

    • rstat1 a day ago

      The US has been doing that for years already. There's plenty of stories of people (US citizens included) being detained by border agents in US airports for refusal to provide said agents with access to their devices.

      • metalcrow 21 hours ago

        They can detain you and take your device, but they cannot compel you to give up your password, to be clear. As a US Citizen you have a right to re-enter the country.

        • rstat1 20 hours ago

          The letter of the law says you are correct. Reality however disagrees. People who are most definitely US citizens have in fact been put in jail for the simple not-crime of refusing to provide passwords to their devices to law enforcement.

  • chopin a day ago

    Isn't that law in the UK as well?

    China takes the west as role model...

  • juliusceasar a day ago

    Soon USA will follow. Using arguments like child safety, terrorists and not supporting Israel.

    • Ekaros a day ago

      Maybe there will be some reasonable limitations on this. Say only allowing it with in 2500km of the borders. Everything inside that is fair game for immigration officals.

    • signatoremo a day ago

      But what do you think about Hongkong? Do the authorities there have valid reasons to do this? Any advices for Hongkong people? for visitors to Hongkong?