“To facilitate this vetting, all applicants for F, M and J non-immigrant visas will be asked to adjust the privacy settings on all their social media profiles to ‘public’”, the official said. “The enhanced social media vetting will ensure we are properly screening every single person attempting to visit our country.”

  • bitwolf@sh.itjust.works
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    7 hours ago

    They finally catch up on technology just in time to be behind again.

    Many are rejecting social media at this point. That number will continue to grow

  • zod000@lemmy.ml
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    8 hours ago

    So, what happens when someone that doesn’t have social media accounts applies for a visa? I assume they just won’t believe such a thing and deny the visa since you can’t prove a negative. Would it make sense for such people to make a social media account and just not use it? This is ridiculous.

    • zaphod@sopuli.xyz
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      8 hours ago

      To them that is already suspicious enough to not let you in the country and put you on some list of known terrorists.

  • jaybone@lemmy.zip
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    13 hours ago

    If you just have some random handle that isn’t your name. How are they gonna trace that to you?

    • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      How are they gonna trace that to you?

      The modern Internet is essentially about spying on you as much as possible and then selling the data to whoever wants to buy it. Linking identities with devices/browsers is worth a lot of money and so most every website/app has a way of linking you to the devices and software that you use.

      Unless the user took some pretty extreme measures to create the account, they’ve likely logged in from a phone/ip/browser that has been linked to their real identity at some point in its lifetime. That link will be sold to data brokers and used to tie the random handle to you, the person. Then the State Department just buys that information.

      Alternatively, you should be assuming that sovereign entities with the means are reading all public network data. There’s a lot of information that you can learn from that as well. Like, over time, the posts from the ‘random’ account could be strongly correlated to the times that you were accessing the site even if all of the data was encrypted with HTTPS.

      Alternatively, alternatively. There is a threat known as Store Now Decrypt Later (SNDL). The idea is basically: Quantum Computers are coming and they can break some cryptographic primitives. If someone saves all of the encrypted traffic that they would want to read, in a few years they will have the means to read that data. We won’t know when this moment occurs, because it’ll likely be a secret, but we do know that it will happen and so you should additionally assume that anything that isn’t using post-quantum encryption, which transited a public network, will be read and used to link you to your identities.

      This is, essentially, the core thing that the Privacy community is attempting to mitigate.

      • Photuris@lemmy.ml
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        5 hours ago

        I’m not a privacy expert.

        And I know that, sadly, they probably have a lot more data on me than I’d like. Even though I don’t have traditional social media anymore, and I use VPNs to access Lemmy, that’s just normie precaution stuff. Anyway I do have a Google, Apple, accounts and the like.

        My question is this: what do you / y’all think about the prospect of “poisoning the well”?

        Meaning: you set up multiple traditional social media accounts, generate fake profile photos for them, give them the same real name as you and part of the country as you live in, and have AI chatbots fill ‘em up with generated posts matching a particular “personality profile”?

        Would that be an effective countermeasure against this sort of data collection? Increase the noise-to-signal ratio?

        Just thinking out loud here.

  • davel@lemmy.ml
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    16 hours ago

    My visa application got rejected for posting a watermelon emoji on Myspace in nineteen dickety two.

    • Halosheep@lemm.ee
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      18 hours ago

      Alternatively, they’ll have a “public facing” social media, and a real one.

      • skisnow@lemmy.ca
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        14 hours ago

        yeah, I can see not having a social media profile at all being treated as tantamount to sedition before too long

      • neon_nova@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        16 hours ago

        I’m so happy that I was able to skip all that stuff.

        I stoped using my mainstream social media around the years ago.

        I kept the profiles, and I think it is good as I can just share them if I’m ever required to.

    • cyrano@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      18 hours ago

      I will imagine that will be seen as suspicious. Interesting businesss to sell clean aged social media account for US only vetting…

      Me: I don’t have a social media account Officer: Sure buddy, wait on a side until you do.

  • Darkard@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    “You better not have said anything mean on there that hurts Donald’s feefees.”