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View Full Version : Travelling to Miami in the future


YorickBrown
08-02-05, - 09:51 AM
Trips to the U.S. will really start to get interesting in the next two or three years...

(Source: Cory Doctorow)

"Starting this week, three US border crossings will begin to tag visitors to America with wireless RFID-cards, which contain visitors' personally identifying information and can be read from 12 yards away. The only exempted visitors are Canadians who are not on a US business visa or engaged to an American.

If this program is "successful" (who the hell knows what constitutes a "success" here -- maybe Homeland Security has a divinating machine that can tell it whether fewer terrorists have entered the country this quarter than last?) this program will go live at every border crossing, in addition to the current practice of fingerprinting and photographing visitors (incidentally, the fact that the DHS had started to fingerprint me when I came home to San Francisco played a major role in my decision to abandon my US work visa and move to the UK -- friends don't fingerprint friends).

They’ll have to carry the wireless devices as a way for border guards to access the electronic information stored inside a document about the size of a large index card. Visitors to the U.S. will get the card the first time they cross the border and will be required the carry the document on subsequent crossings to and from the States.

Border guards will be able to access the information electronically from 12 metres away to enable those carrying the devices to be processed more quickly."

casualobserver
08-05-05, - 08:50 AM
Trips to the U.S. will really start to get interesting in the next two or three years...

(Source: Cory Doctorow)

"Starting this week, three US border crossings will begin to tag visitors to America with wireless RFID-cards, which contain visitors' personally identifying information and can be read from 12 yards away. The only exempted visitors are Canadians who are not on a US business visa or engaged to an American.

If this program is "successful" (who the hell knows what constitutes a "success" here -- maybe Homeland Security has a divinating machine that can tell it whether fewer terrorists have entered the country this quarter than last?) this program will go live at every border crossing, in addition to the current practice of fingerprinting and photographing visitors (incidentally, the fact that the DHS had started to fingerprint me when I came home to San Francisco played a major role in my decision to abandon my US work visa and move to the UK -- friends don't fingerprint friends).

They’ll have to carry the wireless devices as a way for border guards to access the electronic information stored inside a document about the size of a large index card. Visitors to the U.S. will get the card the first time they cross the border and will be required the carry the document on subsequent crossings to and from the States.

Border guards will be able to access the information electronically from 12 metres away to enable those carrying the devices to be processed more quickly."


Do you think that this will negate the need for a visa application? I'd prefer to have this electronic device, identifying me as a 'friendly' rather than go back to the embassy again.

Rizzo
08-05-05, - 10:24 AM
This seems to be only for people actually entering the Us via land borders, not via flights etc, from another country.
Hence, we won't have to worry about this. Only those at actual land borders. :dancer:

casualobserver
08-05-05, - 10:45 AM
This seems to be only for people actually entering the Us via land borders, not via flights etc, from another country.
Hence, we won't have to worry about this. Only those at actual land borders. :dancer:


let's build a bridge then! :usa: :walk: :driving: :escape: :bahamas:

Rory
08-05-05, - 06:41 PM
machine readable passports, require no need for a visa, but not quite available for bahamian passports. They take your fingerprint and a shap shot when you go through.