
Planning a Trip Abroad? Here's How to Protect the Data on Your Devices at U.S. Border Searches
By Milena Malaver and Jay Weaver
Miami Herald
When entering the United States through an airport or seaport, your electronic devices—laptops, phones, tablets—can be subject to search by Customs and Border Protection.
A basic search involves an officer manually reviewing the device's contents without using any external tools.
An advanced search uses specialized equipment to access, copy, and analyze the data on your device. This more invasive search requires reasonable suspicion of a law being broken or a national security threat, and must be approved by a senior Customs or Border Protection official.
But border agents do not need a warrant to conduct either one of these searches.
An electronic device subject to search is any 'that may contain information in an electronic or digital form, such as computers, tablets, disks, drives, tapes, mobile phones, and other communication devices, cameras, music, and other media players,' according to Customs and Border Protection.
Related Stories
3/7/2025
2/27/2024
The issue has made headlines in recent weeks after a Michigan attorney was detained in early April at the Detroit airport by Customs officials, who told him they would confiscate his phone unless he gave it to them to look through his contacts. (Because he was a U.S. citizen, he was given back his phone and eventually allowed to reenter the country after a family vacation in the Dominican Republic.)
'We say everyone should have a plan before travel,' said Sophia Cope, senior attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation nonprofit focused on civil rights in the digital age.
The EFF created an extensive guide on how to protect your digital privacy at the border. Cope said the foundation does not 'discourage people from handing over the actual physical device,' as federal agents have the right to inspect it.
However, Cope said to be aware that an officer may ask for a device to be unlocked or requests the passcode: 'The traveler has to know what they're going to do in that moment, either they're going to comply or they're not going to comply.'
Here are key steps in protecting the data on your device:
Minimize Your Phone's Data
Before you travel, delete sensitive data on your phone or move it to secure cloud storage (and log out of those accounts).
If you're a journalist, attorney, doctor, or other professional, you have a special responsibility to protect sensitive data—whether it's confidential sources, privileged client information, or even personal content like photos or private messages, Cope said.
The EFF also suggests leaving behind electronic devices such as laptops and computers, if possible.
Use Strong Passwords and Encryption
Enable full-disk encryption—on an iPhone, go to Settings and Face ID & Passcode, where you should see the phrase data protection is enabled at the bottom of the page. Also, set up strong, alphanumeric passwords and disable facial recognition and fingerprint identification, as these may be easier to compel.
CBP and other law enforcement agencies can use advanced forensic tools to recover deleted files and reveal past activity on your device, even if it's not visible at first glance, according to the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
But the EFF discourages people from trying to hide data on their devices. 'We recommend against using methods that may be, or even appear to be, calculated to deceive or mislead border agents about what data is present on a device,' she said.
Back Up Your Data
'Backups prevent your data from being lost if your device is seized, stolen, or broken—risks that are significantly heightened during international travel,' according to the EFF.
The EFF has a guide on how to enable advanced data protection on IOS and a Surveillance Self Defense Guide.
You may choose to safeguard your data at home or work or use an online backup you can access while traveling.
Power Down Devices
Turn off your devices completely and make sure they're disconnected from WiFi before arriving at Customs. This ensures that full-disk encryption is active and adds a layer of protection.
Get a Temporary Phone
For especially sensitive travel, consider using a temporary or burner phone with only the essential data needed for your trip, but be prepared for any questions that may arise from agents.
'Sometimes having a completely wiped phone or that kind of very clean travel device might itself raise suspicions,' said Cope.
She suggests that travelers be prepared to give an honest answer when using a travel phone.
'You don't want to be in a situation where what you've done or what you're saying could be interpreted as lying to a federal agent, and that's a crime,' Cope said.
Know Your Rights
You have the right to refuse a search—even if there may be consequences, such as having your electronics confiscated. Assert your rights calmly and ask whether you're free to go. If a device is confiscated, ask for a receipt.
Cope said if you choose not to comply with a request, border agents might let it go if it's just a routine inspection and you're not a specific concern, but there's also a chance it could upset them.
'You kind of have to hope for the best,' she said.
Be Prepared to Seek Legal Support
If you believe your rights are violated, legal organizations like the EFF can help. Document the encounter and seek assistance as soon as possible.
What About Social Media?
Under its 2018 policy, 'CBP expressly says that they are not allowed ... to look at live cloud content,' Cope said.
To make sure officers don't access any information stored online, CBP officers will either ask the traveler to turn off internet and network connections or they'll turn them off themselves, according to the CBP website
This includes both public and private social media—whether it's a public Instagram or a private Facebook account, Cope said. Previously, she said, officers were able to open the apps and scroll through the accounts.
This rule also applies to other devices like laptops or iPads. Customs agents are only permitted to review data 'resident on the device,' which means information that's physically stored on the hard drive, Cope said.
However, she notes a technical caveat: Even though data like emails or social media content live primarily in the cloud, 'copies are downloaded onto the device,' so agents might still see remnants of cloud content.
She recommends that travelers 'delete social media apps' and 'clear the cache' in browsers as a precaution.
Copyright 2025 Miami Herald. Visit at miamiherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Dear Readers: We would love to hear from you. What topics would you like to read about? Please send your feedback and tips to

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Hypebeast
an hour ago
- Hypebeast
升級 iPhone 體驗!Apple 於 WWDC 2025 正式發表 iOS 26
Apple於WWDC 2025正式發表 iOS 26,這次大幅更新帶來優美的新設計、智慧體驗,以及使用者每天常用 App 的改良。全新設計為整個系統帶來更具表現力、更令人愉悅的體驗,同時保有 iOS 的熟悉感。完整整合於系統之中,且由裡到外以隱私為原則而打造的 Apple Intelligence,現在變得更加強大。「電話」和「訊息」App 的更新協助使用者保持聯繫,同時消除騷擾來電等干擾。iOS 26 也在 CarPlay、Apple Music、「地圖」和「錢包」推出新功能,並推出 Apple Games 這款全新 App,讓玩家能在同一處找到所有遊戲。 首先,全新軟體設計使得 App 與系統體驗更加生動而充滿樂趣,同時保有 iOS 的熟悉感。設計以「Liquid Glass」精心打造。Liquid Glass 是一種新的半透明材質,能反射和折射周圍,讓內容更加聚焦,並為控制選項、導覽操作、App 圖示、小工具等項目帶來全新層次的活力。這項全新設計延伸至「主畫面」和「鎖定畫面」,讓它們比以往更加個人化、更具表現力。Liquid Glass 也為 App 圖示和小工具帶來全新自訂選項,包括絕美的透明外觀。 「鎖定畫面」上,時間會依影像裡有的空間流暢調整位置;空間場景會在使用者移動 iPhone 時呈現 3D 效果,為背景圖片增添活力。更新的設計元素也在 App 中帶來煥然一新的體驗。更精簡的「相機」介面設計幫助使用者專注於當下拍攝的瞬間,「照片」App 則更新為將「圖庫」和「選集」顯示為分別的標籤頁。Safari 中的網頁現在可全螢幕滿版顯示,甚至延伸至畫面底部,讓使用者能看到頁面上的更多內容,同時仍方便取用重新載入、搜尋等常用操作。Apple Music 和 Podcast 的標籤列經改造後,會懸浮在使用者的內容上方,並在瀏覽時動態縮小,將內容置於畫面中央;使用者向上滑動時,標籤列則會再度展開。 Apple Intelligence 為 iPhone 帶來升級的體驗,幫助使用者比以往更輕鬆地完成任務,並開啟全新的溝通方式和操作畫面內容的更多可能。Live Translation 整合至「訊息」、FaceTime 和「電話」中,協助使用者跨語言溝通,即時翻譯文字與語音內容。Live Translation 由 Apple 建構、完全在裝置端運作的模型支援,確保使用者的私人對話保持隱私。 CarPlay 是駕駛途中更聰明、更安全使用 iPhone 的方式,每天使用次數超過六億次。現在,CarPlay 隨著 iOS 26 推出更新,變得更加美觀且易於使用。優美的設計元素包括全新精巧的來電顯示畫面,讓使用者在得知來電者的同時,不錯過前方導航資訊等重要內容。iOS 26 也將「點按回應」和釘選對話帶進 CarPlay 的「訊息」,搭配小工具和「即時動態」,讓使用者得以在駕駛不分心的狀況下,掌握最新訊息。這些更新內容也同步推出至 CarPlay Ultra,結合 iPhone 的優勢與汽車的優點,於每個螢幕上提供深度整合、整齊一致的體驗。 Apple Games 是一款全新 App,為玩家提供一站式的遊戲平台。能幫助玩家繼續遊玩喜愛的遊戲、發掘下一款心頭好,並與朋友一起享受更多樂趣。玩家也能掌握所有遊戲的最新動態,包括重大活動與更新,不錯過任何精彩時刻。 Games app 同時也是體驗 Apple Arcade 的最佳方式。Apple Arcade 是 Apple 的遊戲訂閱服務,提供超過 200 款得獎作品,以及備受好評、適合全家共享的遊戲。 更多關於 iOS 26 的其他全新功能,點此即可瀏覽更多。 >Samsung 推出品牌史上最薄智慧型手機 Galaxy S25 Edge >FUJIFILM 推出全新「X half」輕巧型數碼相機 FUJIFILM X-HF1 >Microsoft 正式發佈 Xbox x ROG 全新遊戲掌機系列「ROG Xbox Ally」


The Hill
an hour ago
- The Hill
Apple unveils software redesign while reeling from AI missteps, tech upheaval and Trump's trade war
CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP) — After stumbling out of the starting gate in Big Tech's pivotal race to capitalize on artificial intelligence, Apple tried to regain its footing Monday during an annual developers conference that focused mostly on incremental advances and cosmetic changes in its technology. The presummer rite, which attracted thousands of developers from nearly 60 countries to Apple's Silicon Valley headquarters, subdued compared with the feverish anticipation that surrounded the event in the last two years. Apple highlighted plans for more AI tools designed to simplify people's lives and make its products even more intuitive. It also provided an early glimpse at the biggest redesign of its iPhone software in a decade. In doing so, Apple executives refrained from issuing bold promises of breakthroughs that punctuated recent conferences, prompting CFRA analyst Angelo Zino to deride the event as a 'dud' in a research note. In 2023, Apple unveiled a mixed-reality headset that has been little more than a niche product, and last year WWDC trumpeted its first major foray into the AI craze with an array of new features highlighted by the promise of a smarter and more versatile version of its virtual assistant, Siri — a goal that has yet to be realized. 'This work needed more time to reach our high-quality bar,' Craig Federighi, Apple's top software executive, said Monday at the outset of the conference. The company didn't provide a precise timetable for when Siri's AI upgrade will be finished but indicated it won't happen until next year at the earliest. 'The silence surrounding Siri was deafening,' said Forrester Research analyst Dipanjan Chatterjee said. 'No amount of text corrections or cute emojis can fill the yawning void of an intuitive, interactive AI experience that we know Siri will be capable of when ready. We just don't know when that will happen. The end of the Siri runway is coming up fast, and Apple needs to lift off.' The showcase unfolded amid nagging questions about whether Apple has lost some of the mystique and innovative drive that has made it a tech trendsetter during its nearly 50-year history. Instead of making a big splash as it did with the Vision Pro headset and its AI suite, Apple took a mostly low-key approach that emphasized its effort to spruce up the look of its software with a new design called 'Liquid Glass' while also unveiling a new hub for its video games and new features like a 'Workout Buddy' to help manage physical fitness. Apple executives promised to make its software more compatible with the increasingly sophisticated computer chips that have been powering its products while also making it easier to toggle between the iPhone, iPad, and Mac. 'Our product experience has become even more seamless and enjoyable,' Apple CEO Tim Cook told the crowd as the 90-minute showcase wrapped up. IDC analyst Francisco Jeronimo said Apple seemed to be largely using Monday's conference to demonstrate the company still has a blueprint for success in AI, even if it's going to take longer to realize the vision that was presented a year ago. 'This year's event was not about disruptive innovation, but rather careful calibration, platform refinement and developer enablement —positioning itself for future moves rather than unveiling game-changing technologies,' Jeronimo said. Besides redesigning its software. Apple will switch to a method that automakers have used to telegraph their latest car models by linking them to the year after they first arrive at dealerships. That means the next version of the iPhone operating system due out this autumn will be known as iOS 26 instead of iOS 19 — as it would be under the previous naming approach that has been used since the device's 2007 debut. The iOS 26 upgrade is expected to be released in September around the same time Apple traditionally rolls out the next iPhone models. Apple opened the proceedings with a short video clip featuring Federighi speeding around a track in a Formula 1 race car. Although it was meant to promote the June 27 release of the Apple film, 'F1' starring Brad Pitt, the segment could also be viewed as an unintentional analogy to the company's attempt to catch up to the rest of the pack in AI technology. While some of the new AI tricks compatible with the latest iPhones began rolling out late last year as part of free software updates, the delays in a souped-up Siri became so glaring that the chastened company stopped promoting it in its marketing campaigns earlier this year. While Apple has been struggling to make AI that meets its standards, the gap separating it from other tech powerhouses is widening. Google keeps packing more AI into its Pixel smartphone lineup while introducing more of the technology into its search engine to dramatically change the way it works. Samsung, Apple's biggest smartphone rival, is also leaning heavily into AI. Meanwhile, ChatGPT recently struck a deal that will bring former Apple design guru Jony Ive into the fold to work on a new device expected to compete against the iPhone. Besides grappling with innovation challenges, Apple also faces regulatory threats that could siphon away billions of dollars in revenue that help finance its research and development. A federal judge is currently weighing whether proposed countermeasures to Google's illegal monopoly in search should include a ban on long-running deals worth $20 billion annually to Apple while another federal judge recently banned the company from collecting commissions on in-app transactions processed outside its once-exclusive payment system. On top of all that, Apple has been caught in the crosshairs of President Donald Trump's trade war with China, a key manufacturing hub for the Cupertino, California, company. Cook successfully persuaded Trump to exempt the iPhone from tariffs during the president's first administration, but he has had less success during Trump's second term, which seems more determined to prod Apple to make its products in the U.S. The multidimensional gauntlet facing Apple is spooking investors, causing the company's stock price to plunge by 20% so far this year — a decline that has erased about $750 billion in shareholder wealth. After beginning the year as the most valuable company in the world, Apple now ranks third behind longtime rival Microsoft, another AI leader, and AI chipmaker Nvidia. Apple's shares closed down by more than 1% on Monday — an early indication the company's latest announcements didn't inspire investors.


Business of Fashion
an hour ago
- Business of Fashion
How to Acquire Customers with Instagram Ads in 2025
Advertisers are starting to get a little more bang for their buck on Instagram. In the years after Apple made it harder to track iPhone users' online activities in 2021, the metrics on social marketing mostly headed in one direction: more expensive, less effective. But recently, the data has started looking better. The number of customers who click on Facebook and Instagram ads grew 14 percent year-over-year in the first five months of 2025, while the cost for each of those clicks dropped 10 percent during the same period, according to marketing agency Belardi Wong. There's no one reason online marketing has suddenly opened up again. In the last year, Meta added more AI tools through a platform called Advantage+, which it launched in 2022, that makes it easier for brands to target the right audiences with specific types of ads they're most likely to engage with. A study the company conducted last year found that brands using Advantage+ have seen a 22 percent higher return on ad spend on average, according to Jackie Pimentel, global lead of ads product marketing for Meta. (The company is reportedly planning to fully automate ad creation and targeting in 2026.) (BoF Team) As ads get cheaper, and more effective, it's creating an opening for a new generation of fashion start-ups. Many new brands have leaned towards building a following through their own social media content because paid ads were too expensive, especially when customers who click on them often fail to return. Now, performance marketing is a bigger part of the mix again. What those ads look like has changed since 2021, however. AI may enhance targeting capabilities, but consumers often recoil if the ad itself looks like it was generated by a machine. Potential customers still want to see great storytelling, whether it's glossy still images or pithy reels that show off a brand's personality. Womenswear brand Damson Madder, for example, 'takes a really bespoke approach to what creative we are servicing at every stage in [the] customer journey,' said Emma Shepherd, the brand's head of marketing. Damson Madder uses more polished campaigns to draw in new customers and product-specific imagery to retarget existing customers. Repurposed user-generated content helps fill in storytelling gaps. In two recent videos repackaged as ads, creators Polly Sayer and Poppy Almond show off different outfits they wore during Copenhagen Fashion Week, providing a deeper look at how specific pieces and looks can be styled for everything from café hopping to meetings. 'If you looked at Instagram a few years ago and just Meta ads in general, it used to be like, how do you figure out your targeting to make sure that you target the right audience,' said Emanuel Cinca, founder and chief executive of the Stacked Marketer newsletter. 'It's changed in the past year or so, where almost 80/20 percent of the performance is given by how good your creatives are.' Polished Campaigns A top-performing Instagram ad from With Nothing Underneath's summer 2025 campaign. (With Nothing Underneath) A still from Damson Madder's top-performing January 2025 campaign. (Damson Madder) A still from Set Active's spring 2025 "Coastal Countryside" campaign. (Set Active) When advertising on Instagram, the biggest challenge is getting people to notice an ad when they're quickly scrolling. Brands need to ensure their personality shines through so audiences can quickly get to know their brand identity and also remember them more easily. With these campaigns, consistency in aesthetic and tone of voice goes a long way. Women's shirting brand With Nothing Underneath produces all of its imagery in the brand's signature film camera style, which can have a soft, diffused look that appears more organic than digital photos. It also helps keep costs down; images from a summer 2025 campaign shoot in the South of France were used for both paid ads and posts on its page. One of those ads, which featured a photo of a woman sunning herself overlaid with with the quote 'To be worn effortlessly, without thought or anything underneath,' had 28 percent lower cost per acquisition than its average ad. 'When they get hit with an ad, it would be so weird for them to be hit with something that was not from the same shoot, with a different tone of voice and super corporate copy when they're used to our tone of voice,' said Pip Durell, With Nothing Underneath's founder. 'Our tone of voice is very British … It's a little tongue in cheek. It's not that serious.' Damson Madder uses campaign imagery that tells a story and leans into its playful, quirky style to draw new shoppers in. In January, for instance, it released one of its top-performing campaign carousel ads of 2025 featuring models faced with the slightly surreal chaos of returning to the office after the holiday season. 'Stuff that has some storytelling and intrigue, but is also really beautiful, slick, inspirational fashion campaign imagery and video … is what really draws customers in at the top of the funnel,' said Shepherd. User-Generated Content A UGC video posted during Copenhagen Fashion Week, which Damson Madder repurposed as an ad. (Damson Madder) One of Lisa Says Gah's UGC-style ads produced in-house. (Lisa Says Gah) A college ambassador video Set Active repurposed as an ad. (Set Active) Many brands have turned to repurposing user-generated content to create ads that feel less pushy. The original videos are mostly non-sponsored posts made by influencers walking viewers through a product's functionality or offering styling tips, although some brands are creating in-house versions starring team members. To grow that strategy, brands are getting more strategic about how they work with creators to re-use product content they post. Instead of overloading on gifting, as consumers get better at sniffing out inauthentic sponsored posts, brands are developing longer-lasting partnerships with creators who can choose to post about a product if they wish, and repurposing styling or educational videos that emphasise a product's utility. 'We've done that in the past … where 1,000 people would post the same thing on the same day,' said Vicky Boudreau, founder of micro-influencer platform Heylist. 'Now if you do a campaign asking everybody to post the same messaging within the same format, it looks super staged.' Set Active sees user-generated videos working 'because consumers can see how it moves, how it flows, how it fits into a daily life,' said Johnson, and the brand has recently scaled this content to make up 25 percent of its ads, up from 15 percent. The brand directly collects videos created by its community, and then requests usage rights. Some brands have even taken to producing content in-house that mimics what users might create. One of Lisa Says Gah's top five performing campaigns in the past year, for example, featured the brand's creative producer modelling the Jenny dress, and generated a $6 return — while its typical return on ad spend has been $5 for the year thus far. Product-Focused Imagery A Damson Madder ad highlighting some of its accessories. (Damson Madder) A Lisa Says Gah ad highlighting pieces from its summer collection. A Set Active video ad featuring pieces from the brand's core collection. (Set Active) Brands are learning when to push product-specific imagery — whether flat-lay product images or e-commerce product shots — which were once known to clog users' feeds but can be effective at converting shoppers who are already familiar with a brand. While Spanish womenswear brand Hand Over primarily focuses on campaigns and creator content, it uses product shots 'when we feel people need to just add it to the cart, maybe on Black Friday or a day after a drop,' said Lucia Mac Lean, the brand's creative lead. Product-focused visuals can be similarly effective in a video format. One of Set Active's top-performing ads is an 11-second video overlaid with the caption 'pov: your summer 2025 capsule wardrobe has arrived,' which showcases how a variety of pieces from their most recent collection can be styled. Whether a brand is producing polished campaigns, repurposing user content or drilling down to product-specific imagery, it needs to ensure its ads are reaching consumers at the right point in their shopping journey. New AI tools are helping brands quickly put an ad in front of a group of customers and see how they respond to it before pushing the ad out to a larger pool of users, said Cinca from Stacked Marketer. 'The biggest benefit is just the ease of testing,' he added. The tools are also helping brands reach larger audiences on Instagram, Meta's Pimentel said. 'Instead of like 100 people, where we look to see who among these 100 people are right for your ad, for your business? Who might convert? We actually can do that at a much larger scale,' she said. While many brands are still figuring out how much AI targeting they want to use, especially around tools that tailor the content of ads to specific customers, it's important to continue prioritising the quality of their content. 'It's reached a point where, really, the creatives are what matter the most,' said Cinca.