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Not so smart - America may demand the right to peruse visitors mobile phones

rlp

More bad news for the country's tourism industry

Apr 5th 2017

by B.R.

THE effect that Donald Trump is having on American tourism seems clear. Data

from online travel agents, which analyse customers searches and are thus privy

to the most timely information on travel trends, are unanimous in the bleakness

of their assessments. Expedia, Cheapflights and Kayak are just some of the

sites reporting that interest in travelling to the United States has fallen

since Mr Trump s inauguration and his attempted travel bans and drawbridge-up

rhetoric. (The strong dollar hasn't helped.) Economic forecasters are

pessimistic, too. Oxford Economics, for example, reckons that as many as 6.7m

fewer tourists will visit America this year; a fall of 8% compared to last

year.

Those working in the American tourism industry are desperate to see the

drip-drip of negative news stories come to an end. They will have been

dismayed, therefore, by a Wall Street Journal article published on April 4th.

According to the paper, the Trump administration is considering introducing

even harsher security checks on foreign tourists, either when they enter the

country or when they apply for a visa. The new proposals, called extreme

vetting , include a right to access visitors mobile phones. A Department of

Homeland Security official told the Journal that the goal is to "figure out who

you are communicating with . Contacts will come under particular scrutiny,

although the implication is that other functions photos, maybe, or messaging

apps could also be of interest.

Such a measure would be both ludicrously easy to circumvent for criminals and

disproportionately stressful for the average traveller. Many of us are weirdly

protective about our smartphones; we consult them so often they feel like

confidantes. The idea of a stranger nosing his way around them feels like a

violation. Meanwhile, the policy would have little effect on the dangerous

people it is supposed to target. Ne er-do-wells would simply stop bringing

incriminating phones into the country (if, indeed, that is what they currently

do). It is presumably not beyond the wit of a foreign terrorist to log onto

Craigslist once he has entered the United States and pick up a cheap unlocked

Samsung.

Other measures under consideration include demanding access to travellers

financial records and social-media passwords. Unlike some of Mr Trump s other

self-inflicted travel wounds, such extreme vetting might at least be

indiscriminate. According to the WSJ s source, it will not only affect people

from the Muslim countries that the president distrusts. Nationals from America

s allies such as Britain, Germany and Australia could also be subject to

checks. As residents of these countries can travel to the United States without

a visa, any phone-rummaging would presumably have to be done on arrival, rather

than on applying for permission to travel.

Even if few travellers end up having their phones examined, such signals from

the Trump administration whether travel bans from Muslim countries, laptop

restrictions on planes, overly intrusive security screening or building walls

suggest a country that would rather tourists stayed away. Even if this is not

the intention, it may well end up being the result.