Above all, what you actually *say* at the border can determine what happens next. A friend was denied entry to Canada on Saturday because he told the immigration people he was unemployed (or perhaps "between jobs"). No SIGGRAPH 2018 for him. Ole Ole J. Jacobsen Editor and Publisher The Internet Protocol Journal Office: +1 415-550-9433 Cell: +1 415-370-4628 UK EE: +44 7805 977889 Docomo: +81 090 3337-9311 E-mail: olejacobsen@xxxxxx Skype: organdemo On Wed, 15 Aug 2018, Jared Mauch wrote: > When we went to Argentina things did change if you held a US > passport. I had already paid my fee and then in the days up to the > meeting things changed. > > Talk to your travel agent or use a visa service if necessary. Your > unique situation may be different than me or someone else. > International travel carries risks and you should know what those > are before you leave home. > > I have been advised by CBSA agents that speaking at a conference in > Canada would/should require a visa for example. Does this count as > presenting at a WG meeting? IANAL, but you need to adjust your > behaviors according to the laws of where you are. > > Importantly: you can always participate remotely. The tools are > quite good > > Jared Mauch > > > On Aug 15, 2018, at 4:03 AM, Carsten Bormann <cabo@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Yes, it would need to be qualified as “not legal advice”, “subject > > to change”, “void where prohibited”, etc. It would help if it > > contains pointers to authoritative information I can look up > > myself. > >