您现在的位置是:百科 >>正文
【】
百科66人已围观
简介U.S. Customs and Border Protection somehow just managed to get even more handsy when it comes to you ...
U.S. Customs and Border Protection somehow just managed to get even more handsy when it comes to your most intimate data.
Starting today, the branch of the Department of Homeland Security will start collecting DNA from people it detains at the U.S. border. And yes, according to a privacy impact assessment published by DHS, kids as young as 14 are subject to the new program.
The agency, asserts the DHS, will only collect DNA from people who are in custody and "subject to fingerprinting." This means that, should you be fortunate enough to breeze through the border as a U.S. citizen, your DNA will not be added to the FBI-maintained database where the records will end up.
However, should you be snagged in the nightmare that is CBP detention — like other U.S. citizens were just this past weekend — you won't be so lucky.

The collection of DNA at the border starts off as a pilot program, notes the above-linked privacy impact assessment, and includes five phases we will theoretically be subjected to over the course of the next three years. The Associated Press reports that the program will kick off in Detroit and at the Eagle Pass, Texas, port of entry.
It is slated to eventually span the entire nation.
The government is aware of various privacy risks associated with its plan, which are detailed within its assessment. Some of which, it should be noted, are rather chilling.
"There is a risk that individuals whose DNA sample is collected while the individuals are children will not be aware that their DNA profile will remain on file with FBI in perpetuity," notes the impact assessment.
And there's more. "There is a risk of over collection of information," continues the document, "particularly from young children, who could not have committed any crimes for which to match against."
Thankfully, the document assures us, "CBP does not categorically fingerprint individuals under the age of 14, and therefore will not be collecting DNA samples, but has the discretion to do so in potentially criminal situations."
There, don't you feel better already? Well, according to American Civili Liberties Union attorney Stephen Kang, you shouldn't.
SEE ALSO:Racist Border Patrol Facebook group confirms all your worst suspicionsKang told the Associated Press that he wondered if the government is creating "a DNA bank of immigrants that have come through custody for no clear reason," and added that "it raises a lot of very serious, practical concerns, I think, and real questions about coercion."
It definitely does.
TopicsCybersecurityPrivacy
Tags:
转载:欢迎各位朋友分享到网络,但转载请说明文章出处“夫榮妻貴網”。http://new.maomao321.com/news/49f2599925.html
相关文章
How Hyperloop One went off the rails
百科In December 2014, an engineer with the unlikely name Brogan BamBrogan was in the driveway of his cla ...
【百科】
阅读更多NASA finds organic matter on Mars, but that doesn't mean it's aliens
百科More than 3 billion years ago, Mars was a very different place. It wasn't the rusty, dead seeming wo ...
【百科】
阅读更多'Sekiro' feels like 'Dark Souls' wrapped up in an Akira Kurosawa film
百科There is something so beautifully fitting about From Software entering the pantheon of Japanese arti ...
【百科】
阅读更多
热门文章
- Visualizing July's astounding global temperature records
- NASA finds organic matter on Mars, but that doesn't mean it's aliens
- We have decided to stan Pete Davidson and Ariana Grande
- Drone footage shows the Fuego volcano's hellish aftermath in Guatemala
- Xiaomi accused of copying again, this time by Jawbone
- Facebook scraps custom reaction buttons, including rainbow Pride flag
最新文章
Snapchat is about to explode in popularity, report says
'Unusual' water temps may mean a quiet 2018 Atlantic hurricane season
Finally, a meme that combines our two main interests: crying and the Nae Nae
E3 2018: All the biggest reveals from Microsoft's Xbox showcase
Olympic security asks female Iranian fan to drop protest sign
Nikolaj Coster
