老澳门六合彩开奖记录

Imagine arriving at the hotel in your travel destination only to be told that you won鈥檛 be given a room key because you can鈥檛 leave your room. In fact, you can鈥檛 even open the windows while you鈥檙e stuck there for two weeks. Instead, you鈥檙e brought pre-packaged breakfasts, asked questions about your medical conditions, and given the numbers to local mental health hotlines. The way this trip is looking, you might need them.

This describes the saga US-based contributing Marie Claire editor, Chloe Angyal, since arriving in Australia on July 4. But Australia is far from the only country to have begun implementing forced quarantines and health checks for foreign travelers. Airports and airlines have also been taking measures ranging from temperature checks to rapid-response blood tests to curb the spread of COVID-19.

While such measures are good news for those rightfully worried about the virus鈥檚 spread, they also raise concerns about traveler privacy. Contact tracing requires surveillance, and health checks away from home mean giving up very personal information to foreign officials.

For travelers weighing the desire to journey against possible privacy infringements, here are some current measures to consider:

Temperature checks and mask requirements

In late June, Airlines for America, an organization that includes Delta, American Airlines, JetBlue, Southwest, United, and others, said it would 鈥渟upport鈥 the Transportation Security Administration in conducting passenger temperature checks in airports. Those with temperatures too high to fly will get refunds for their missed flights. Most airlines now also require passengers to wear masks, besides the very young and those with certain medical conditions.

TSA Officers Contract COVID-19 in Orlando, US
The TSA has been tasked with conducting temperature checks at airports in the USA 漏 Paul Hennessy / Echoes Wire/Barcroft Media/Getty Images

Plenty of people see these basic protective measures as infringements on civil liberties 鈥 spend just minutes scrolling through Twitter and you鈥檒l find videos of 鈥淜aren鈥 yelling for the manager about how it鈥檚 her right not to wear a mask at Trader Joe鈥檚. But this is one of the least invasive ways people can protect others (and themselves) from falling ill.

Read more: No face mask, no flight: the new rule of travel?

Thermal cameras

Thermal imaging cameras have since the coronavirus outbreak, including London City Airport. There, travelers with higher body temperatures can be pulled aside and questioned about their health.

A the system doesn鈥檛 store any personal data, including identifiable images of travelers. (It鈥檚 not the most effective way to track possible COVID-19 carriers, either 鈥 infectious people may not have fevers, and those with fevers may not have coronavirus.)

Temperature measurement at the airport terminal, thermal image
Passengers are tracked using thermal cameras 漏 Izusek / E+ / Getty Images

Contact tracing

Contact tracing from flights has been attempted as early as February for travelers landing in the US. In California, were flagged for contact tracing. Soon after, however, the virus began spreading so widely in California that the measure became ineffective.

That said, the system is already more or less in place for airlines to track down virus-exposed travelers.

鈥淭oday, airlines hold contact information for the majority of the passengers on-board,鈥 Joe Leader, CEO of the Airline Passenger Experience Association, wrote to 老澳门六合彩开奖记录 in an email. Third-party ticket sellers, however, may not provide customers鈥 contact information to airlines 鈥 but with COVID-19, they could be more likely to. 鈥淓ven if the traveler does not authorize sharing, they may provide this information directly,鈥 Leader says.

Apps and wearables

According to a , more than 45 countries have developed wearable tracking apps, which could be 鈥渕andatory or strongly encouraged鈥 for visitors to don upon arrival.

One popular travel destination, Hawaii, already walked back its plan to after significant pushback related to privacy concerns. But outside of the US, requiring use of a tracking app is more familiar to locals and therefore easier to enforce with visitors. For example, in and , visitors have to download contact tracing apps once they arrive at the airport.

In Hong Kong, those apps connect to QR-encoded wristbands not unlike those you鈥檇 wear at a concert to show you鈥檙e old enough to drink. Travelers must wear them for two weeks, using the bracelets to periodically prove they haven鈥檛 left their designated quarantine spot (a place they must scan the perimeter of using the app).

As the , 鈥淓ven a low-tech, non-electronic bracelet with a unique code can play a significant role in making new kinds of surveillance feel familiar and normalized.鈥

shutterstockRF_713431726.jpg
Biometric identification, such as fingerprints, are increasingly used to track travelers 漏 Andrey_Kuzmin/Shutterstock

Biometric identification

Some air travelers already give away their biometric information before getting to their departure gate. CLEAR customers scan their fingerprints to skip long security lines, and they may no longer be alone.

CLEAR鈥檚 new product, , connects biometrics (face, eyes, and fingerprints) to a person鈥檚 health data, and the company鈥檚 working on getting wider adoption of its product to help fight COVID-19. CLEAR鈥檚 established connection with airports means those could be among the first places to use Health Pass.

Meanwhile, Australia鈥檚 Department of Home Affairs recently to scan those entering the country, though it鈥檚 been in the works since before COVID-19. Hawaii airports, too, are testing facial recognition technology, which the American Civil Liberties Union has

鈥淕et ready for the biometric wave, because it鈥檚 coming,鈥 says aviation security expert Jeff Price. 鈥淚t was in motion before the pandemic鈥the aviation and security industries] are truly looking for paperless travel, where your face becomes your ticket.鈥 Biometric data can be then be tied to social media profiles, or used to track down travelers wanted by the law, Price adds.

A person in PPE tests a woman for coronavirus
Coronavirus tests might be mandatory throughout the duration of travelers' stay in various countries 漏 microgen/Getty Images

Forced quarantines

Currently in effect for US residents traveling to a number of countries, forced quarantines generally mean new arrivals have to give their exact destination address and contact information to government officials and remain in that location without leaving for two weeks. In the UK, those who don鈥檛 comply can .

Other countries have even more extreme guidelines. The , including Bermuda, where mandatory COVID-19 tests await travelers not just at the airport, but also three additional times during the first two weeks of their stay 鈥 something Angyal also had to look forward to during her forced quarantine in Australia.

The future of COVID-19 air travel measures

is the concern that changes made now to help curb the spread of coronavirus will remain in place in the long-term. Just as increased airport security has been normalized in the wake of September 11 so may biometric scans in airports and healtth checks upon arriving in foreign countries.

However, as Price points out, making biometric scans a mandatory part of air travel has been in the works for a while. The pandemic just speeds up the process. In the meantime, Price sees measures like mandatory mask wearing on airplanes remaining in effect for 鈥渁 long time.鈥

鈥淸COVID-19] is never just going to vanish,鈥 says Price, who has three autoimmune diseases. 鈥淥nce people realize this is like the flu, it鈥檚 going to come every year鈥e鈥檝e still got to live.鈥 Measures aimed at keeping travelers safe, including those that collect personal data, may live on, too.

You might also like:

Why virtual tours are here to stay
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