took his work phone with him in case of emergency. But no other democratic countries are holding people and demanding their PIN
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Replying to @PokerVixen
Really? We know what every country does to random travelers to their country? I wouldn't bet my security clearance on it
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Replying to @wndywitch
every country has a website with travel requirements. Regardless, not rare to take work phone with you traveling
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Replying to @PokerVixen
I know lawyers are told to take burner phones and leave important case information off devices when traveling
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Replying to @wndywitch @PokerVixen
1/ I'm a lawyer. Never been told not to travel with phone or iPad. In fact, always travel with both.
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Replying to @wndywitch @PokerVixen
1/ I haven't traveled internationally for work recently, but would definitely take phone/iPad if I did.
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2/ In modern world of int'l affiliate, subsidiaries & biz partners, how do you travel without work phone/iPad/laptop?
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Replying to @Grange95 @PokerVixen
I honestly have no idea. I assume it involves moving all data to cloud and erasing most everything else before airport
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Replying to @wndywitch @PokerVixen
If you have highly sensitive information or are going to certain places, it makes sense to take extreme measures.
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But in the case of the JPL guy, it seemed like routine travel that wasn't risky. Except for the US govt, that is.
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