If they want to try and break a 128-bit encryption and a bio-metric scanner to view my 1 Terabytecollection, they are quiet welcome.
(Note: The only that is true about the above statement is the 1 Terabyte, but it is not filled with)
Quite useless, actually. They won't even boot the thing, just remove the HDD and go on from here, and all the VM's will be plain.Personaly, I just use a maze of Virtual PC's. Think, a PC, running windows, emulating Linux, emulating Mac, emulating Windows, emulating Mac, emulating Linux...
My opinion as a good American is that they have noNow, about the whole issue itself and a cluster of issues of similar nature, it looks like public eyes closing ritual instead of the actual security increase.
They just do something somewhere, checking somebody looking for someone, bombing hell know who for terrorist acts made from god knows where.
Humans are not designed to live strictly by rules.
All that is of course an opinion from half the world away, probably biased on variety of media and traveler accounts.
What would be an American's opinion?
If they ever try that to me when I'm entering the USA then I'll turn right around and leave again. That is absolutely insane, I'm normally all for measures that stop terrorism - but this is taking the piss.
As far as i know, refusing to give the encryption keys constitutes a good reason for suspicion.
What would be an American's opinion?
Actually, you'd probably be here a while: http://www.alternet.org/rights/95351?page=1
All I can say is I apologize to any of you guys who come here to visit. It's become a complete embarassment. Maybe someday we will find some sanity.
I would refuse the encryption keys, as, at least in the US, refusal to allow a search specifically cannot be used as reason for suspicious activity, so, I would refuse, and point out this from the 4th amendment to the US constitution...
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
Courts have held that "reasonable" means police have an articulable suspicion that the person being searched is doing something illegal. Articulable means they can state it objectively.
Wikipedia article on ACTA said:Newspaper reports indicate that the proposed agreement would empower security officials at airports and other international borders to conduct random ex officio searches of laptops, MP3 players, and cellular phones for illegally downloaded or "ripped" music and movies. Travelers with infringing content would be subject to a fine and may have their devices confiscated or destroyed.
(Why did they have to put such a weasel-word as "unreasonable" in there? It allows the ammendment to be interpreted in practically any way the reader wants, depending on the definition of "unreasonable" used.)