Advertisement
The little-known immigration program some call a 'digital cage'
ResumeWhen Hashim crossed the U.S.-Mexico border seeking asylum in 2020, he was tired—tired of running, tired of being locked in cages.
Hashim was a political activist in Uganda, his home country, where he had been imprisoned and beaten. When he fled to Mexico, he was detained and, again, beaten.
In the United States, Immigration and Customs Enforcement offered him a deal: He enrolled in a program allowing him to live with friends in Maine.
But Hashim says he didn't understand what he was giving up to be in this little-known program, one which requires migrants to hand over voice and face IDs, internet and phone data, height, weight, social networks, location, and more.
Show notes:
- "What are Alternatives to Detention?" (ICE)
- "Immigration Detention Abolition and the Violence of Digital Cages" (Colorado Law, Sarah Sherman-Stokes)
- "American Dragnet" (Georgetown Center on Privacy & Technology)
- "'I felt like I was a prisoner': The rapid rise of US immigration authorities’ electronic surveillance programs" (Coda Story)
- "ICE Digital Prisons" (Just Futures Law)
- "BI SmartLiNK® Privacy Policy" (BI via Berkeley Law)