On Mon, Apr 03, 2017 at 06:39:32PM +0200, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ wrote: > Definitively if that happens to me in EU, I will not provide passwords > even if I don’t have anything to hide, but just because customer’s > info confidentiality, signed NDAs, etc. I don’t think that will bring > me to the jail. However, in US, detention is a fact, right? It's not. If you're a U.S. person (citizen, national, or permanent resident) you cannot be refused entry on account of refusal to provide passwords to your devices (though, if Customs believes you're carrying contraband and has sufficient probable cause you might be charged and arrested, but failure to provide passwords alone is insufficient). If you're NOT a U.S. person you may be refused entry, but cannot be detained indefinitely, and you cannot be refused the right to go home. The reports of harassment are worrisome, and even more so reports that lack of devices, or having clean devices, is taken as suspicious. Employees of many companies simply can't carry non-clean devices if *credentials* compromise at borders would have negative consequences for them. But if carrying clean devices (or no devices) can lead to denial of entry, then why bother going at all? All that said, I've been harassed by Customs in Japan and Canada, and I have heard harassment stories in Argentina (where I hail from) and elsewhere. My impression and experience is that Europeans customs are the least likely to harass visitors. Nico --