New Zealand Law Is an Affront to Travelers' Privacy, but Things Aren't Much Better Here
In New Zealand, customs officials can now demand that travelers unlock their electronic devices.

A New Zealand law lets border officials demand that travelers entering the country unlock their electronic devices so agents can search them. Refusal to do so could mean a hefty fine.
The guidelines in New Zealand's Customs and Excise Act are believed to be the first of their kind in the world. But with the law taking effect this week, it's a good time to remember that even in the U.S., privacy protections for travelers are virtually nonexistent.
New Zealand's law says that if customs officers have "reasonable cause" to suspect that a traveler—citizen or noncitizen—is in the process of or about to break the law, they can search that person's electronic device and force the user "to provide access information," which in this case means "codes, passwords, and encryption keys."
Travelers who don't comply can be prosecuted and/or fined up to NZ$5,000 (US$3,269). Customs agents can also conduct a "full search," meaning the device can be seized and the data on it "copied, reviewed, or evaluated."
The New Zealand Customs Service claims in a press release that the legislation is necessary because it "uses modern language that is easier to understand and interpret." According to Customs Service spokesperson Terry Brown, "the travelling public is unlikely to notice much different at the border."
The New Zealand Council for Civil Liberties (CCL) disagrees, explaining in a statement of its own that the bill's "reasonable cause" requirement isn't enough. "The law now says they have to have reasonable cause, but they do not have to prove this before confiscating your device, nor is there a way to meaningfully protest or appeal at the time of confiscation," the group notes.
Criminals with something to hide can back up their data to the internet and delete it from their phones when they travel. It's "normal law-abiding people" whose privacy will be breached, the CCL says.
Laws like these are why Americans are lucky to live in the land of freedom, right? Not so fast.
While the Fourth Amendment is supposed to protect "against unreasonable searches and seizures," your rights can be put on hold at the border. As the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) points out, federal authorities claim not to need a justification to search both immigrants and American citizens at "ports of entry," such at international airports.
According to the Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) website, authorities can seize your device and copy the data on it. So what happens if your device is locked and you don't want to unlock it?
"U.S. citizens and returning green card holders can't be denied entry for refusing to provide a password," ACLU attorney Esha Bhandari told The Guardian in March 2017. But border agents can still make your life difficult. "There's a risk you could be held, detained…for hours in an unpleasant, windowless secondary inspection room," Naathan Freed Wessler, another ACLU lawyer, told CNN last year.
Things are even worse for foreign nationals. Those travelers might not be able to get into the U.S. at all if they don't want to give border agents access to their locked devices.
Entering the U.S. often means abandoning your right to privacy. Soon, things might not be much better if you're trying to leave the country. The Washington Post reported last month that at 15 airports around the nation, travelers' faces are electronically scanned before they leave the United States. And CBP says facial recognition scanning will be coming soon to each international airport in the U.S.
If you're an American looking for privacy when you travel, avoiding New Zealand might be a good idea. Unfortunately, avoiding the U.S. is a lot harder.
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So if I travel eliminate everything off of my phone especially any notes that may pertain to patentable items, and since your web history is never really deleted don't use your phone for surfing porn or web sites that may be deemed counter to government business like Reason.
is never really deleted don't use your phone for surfing porn
Uh oh.
Hooray for Parliamentary Supremacy.
As bad as things get in the US, and the problems caused by vagueness in the Constitution things can always be worse. NZ and UK are similar in that there is no written Constitution and we have to endure with Parliamentary Precedent.
OT: So I saw the FEMA emergency broadcast alert on TV. Why was it in Spanish first? I thought we were MAGA!
I saw that. I was yelling at the TV: "I don't speak Mexican. Go back to Puerto Rico!".
And that's how you MAGA
Who knew that THE WALL also would have kept evil Mexican airwaves from raping our broadcasts?
"credibly raped", mind you.
Believe all broadcasts
This is funny on multiple levels. Well played.
And NZ wanted to be my libertarian utopia.
You're a NZie
You can't have nukes in Kiwi-ville. What kind of libertarian utopia bans private ownership of nuclear weapons?
Health experts weigh on on Fortnite: More addictive than heroin.
Whoops, I forgot my password. AAAAAAAAnd, it's locked.
That's wilful understatement bordering on straight out denial.
Things are a hell of a lot worse here.
Having dealt with NZ customs carrying actual contraband (airline honey packages and US boot soil) recently, you're right. My experience was far less pleasant and far more expensive with TSA.