Trump’s laptop travel restriction is a confusing mess

推薦收購

Trump’s laptop travel restriction is a confusing mess

Trump’s laptop travel restriction is a confusing mess

/

Confusion, explained

Share this story


推薦收購

Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Last night, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced a decision to ban carry-on laptops and tablets on direct flights from eight Muslim-majority countries: Egypt, Jordan, Qatar, Kuwait, Morocco, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey. Passengers traveling to the US from 10 airports in these countries will be barred from bringing laptops, tablets, or any devices “larger than a cellphone” as carry-on items; they will instead have to take them in checked luggage. It was reported on Tuesday that the UK is implementing a similar electronics ban on flights from some Middle Eastern countries.

The US government’s decision to ban carry-on electronics has sparked criticism, confusion, and a series of pressing questions.

What’s the motivation behind the device ban?

The DHS has described the order as a national security measure, saying that “evaluated intelligence” shows that terrorists are intent on “smuggling explosive devices in various consumer items.” The UK announced their own laptop ban this morning, with security sources telling The Telegraph that they “have seen the same intelligence as their US counterparts.” But Sky News noted that the decision was made in response to “the general threat of terrorism.”

So far, the DHS has not indicated that the ban was issued in response to an imminent threat. But Ozzie Nelson, an analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, says the narrow scope of the order suggests that the government is reacting to precise intelligence.

“Anytime you get something, this specific of a remedy, that means they have pretty good intelligence regarding it,” says Nelson, a former National Security Council official. Nelson acknowledges that terrorists will likely continue to seek new ways to bring explosives on planes, though he says keeping larger devices out of their hands during flights could mitigate the risk of bigger explosions.

“Anytime you get something, this specific of a remedy, that means they have pretty good intelligence regarding it.”

Is checking a laptop really safer than having it in the cabin?

Philip Baum, a UK-based aviation security analyst and editor of Aviation Security International, says that it may be harder to activate laptop bombs if they’re in the carriage of a plane, but he says gate screening is more effective than cargo screening.

“We are much more effective at screening cabin baggage than we are hold baggage, because you’re dealing with smaller quantities and you’ve got the person in front of you,” Baum says. But, he adds, the new measure will do nothing to address “insider threats” at airports, such as the aviation worker who helped carry out the bombing of a Somali airplane last year.

In a series of tweets posted Tuesday morning, Thomas Joscelyn, senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, noted that “Al Qaeda has been experimenting with sophisticated explosives that can be brought on planes, avoiding X-Ray detection, for some time.” Joscelyn described the failed attack on the Somali jet as “part of an [Al Qaeda] effort across its regional branches” to experiment with “sophisticated explosives.”

Nelson, of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, says that “building a portable bomb and getting it to explode at the right time with the right force and impact is actually a difficult thing to do,” adding: “The best way to control an explosion is to actually have your hands on your device to be able to detonate it.”

Why are phones exempt from the ban?

Banned devices include cameras, tablets, e-readers, portable DVD players, game units, travel printers, and scanners. Smartphones are still allowed, though there is some confusion around the government’s definition of a smartphone. An FAQ posted on the DHS website today does not specify the maximum size of smartphones that will be allowed on planes, stating only: “Smartphones are commonly available around the world and their size is well understood by most passengers who fly internationally. Please check with your airline if you are not sure whether your smartphone is impacted.” In other words, you know it when you see it.

Nelson says he doesn’t know the specifics of the technology that the government is currently concerned about, but that the decision to exempt smartphones could have been a question of size: “You need mass to have a larger explosion.”

Are there economic motivations to the device ban?

Writing in The Washington Post, Henry Farrell and Abraham Newman, professors at George Washington University, suggest that the ban may have more to do with economic protectionism than national security.

“Three of the airlines that have been targeted for these measures — Emirates, Etihad Airways and Qatar Airways — have long been accused by their US competitors of receiving massive effective subsidies from their governments,” they write. “These airlines have been quietly worried for months that President Trump was going to retaliate. This may be the retaliation.” Banning in-flight electronics, they add, could push valuable business class customers to US airlines.

“These airlines have been quietly worried for months that President Trump was going to retaliate. This may be the retaliation.”

Okay, but what about connecting flights?

Officials have said that the electronics ban only applies to direct flights to the US from select airports, meaning terrorists could circumvent the restriction through connecting flights, Baum says. According to Nelson, travelers with connecting flights through Europe are typically re-screened before flying to the US, and American officials may have more confidence in screening technology and information sharing there than in the countries targeted by the order.

It is, however, a strange distinction. As The New York Times notes, US-bound passengers flying through the Abu Dhabi airport are already screened by US customs officials; it is one of 15 airports under the DHS’s preclearance program, which stations more than 600 customs officials at airports across the world.

There’s also still some confusion about carry-on restrictions for so-called “second freedom” and “fifth-freedom” flights, which can stop in third countries to refuel, let off, and pick up new passengers. CNN’s Jon Ostrower pointed out:

Is this an extension of Trump’s executive order ban from Muslim-majority countries?

The order doesn’t impact any of the countries affected by Trump’s travel ban executive order. That said, civil liberties activists have raised concerns over racial profiling. “The administration hasn’t provided a security rationale that makes sense for this measure targeting travelers from Muslim-majority countries,” Hina Shamsi, national security project director at the ACLU, said in an email. “Given the administration’s already poor track record, this measure sends another signal of discriminatory targeting.”

And other organizations are concerned by how the directive could impact personal data. In a statement to The Verge, Electronic Frontier Foundation International Director Danny O’Brien said that, “While we are still reviewing reports about the ban on carry-on electronics, the rule is troubling on several fronts. Devices are vulnerable to being stolen or damaged, which is why people don’t check them. They may also be searched without travelers’ knowledge. The government should be more transparent about the need for the new rule, which affects the privacy of our data.”

Whether or not the device ban can be considered an extension of Trump’s previous orders, its impact follows the same line of reasoning: make it more difficult and inconvenient for those in the Middle East to travel to the United States. As one former administration official told BuzzFeed News, “It appears to be a Muslim ban by a thousand cuts.”

Update: This piece has been updated with a comment from the Electronic Frontier Foundation.


推薦收購(圖/翻攝蘋果官網)

面對 AI 人工智慧的浪潮,蘋果也改變態度了嗎?自從去年 ChatGPT 崛起之後,各大科技公司不斷把產品掛上 AI 一詞,然而蘋果態度始終保守,鮮少會在任何產品、訪談提到 AI,在最新推出的 MacBook Air,蘋果一改往常態度,罕見將 AI 作為主打核心。外媒《9to5mac》即認為,這或許是行銷話術。

於蘋果昨日(4)晚間發布的新聞稿,提到搭載 M3 晶片的 MacBook Air 是「全球最佳消費型
推薦收購筆電中,體驗 AI 應用的完美首選」,並且表示能充分發揮 AI 效能,還有一系列具有 AI 功能的 App 生態。問題是,M3 晶片早在去年就與新款 MacBook Pro 一同發表,效能並沒有任何變化,回顧當時官方的新聞稿,卻完全沒有提及任何有關於 AI 的敘述。

事實上,綜觀蘋果在 2023 年的官方發表會、新聞稿以及高層訪談,幾乎不會直說 AI 等字眼,更傾向使用機器學習、語言模型作為替代。然而,從今年初開始,執行長庫克(Tim Cook)就頻繁對外提到生成式 AI 等內容,甚至預告在今年就會有重大發表,似乎都顯示蘋果現在有了不一樣的看法。

對此,外媒《9to5mac》認為 AI 是用來宣傳舊晶片的行銷話術,僅管 AI 長期都是蘋果的核心策略,在 Mac 晶片早已加入用於 AI 運算的神經網路引擎,不過過往都是以機器學習來稱呼,但現在蘋果知道行話已經產生變化,提及 AI 反而會更吸引消費者與投資客的目光。

推薦收購
推薦收購

發佈留言

發佈留言必須填寫的電子郵件地址不會公開。 必填欄位標示為 *