No evidence of mandatory face scans for Canadians at US border
"Facial recognition checks now mandatory for Canadians entering the U.S. by car," reads the text inside a May 19, 2025 Facebook photo.
The caption accompanying the image, which was also shared on TikTok, claims new border screening procedures would include photographing travelers for the purposes of verifying their identification documents. Separate posts spread similar claims about required facial recognition scans for Canadians at land border crossings on Facebook and Instagram.
With an emphasis on immigration enforcement, the first months of Donald Trump's second presidency have been marked by concerns of potentially unlawful deportations and moves to scrap the longstanding birthright citizenship policy. The president's occupation with border security precipitated trade tensions with Canada, after he alleged his country's northern neighbor fails to stop the dangerous drug fentanyl and undocumented migrants from reaching the United States.
The changing relationship between the two countries already led to misleading claims about commerce and travel, and the rumor that Canadians would now be subjected to mandatory facial recognition scans are similarly inaccurate.
Recent reporting from the tech magazine Wired found CBP was planning to photograph every traveler entering and exiting the United States in personal vehicles to match their face to their identification documents (archived here and here).
According to the CBP website, biometric data collection, which can include face scans and fingerprinting, is currently in testing for entries by vehicles at border crossings into Buffalo, New York and Brownsville, Texas (archived here and here).
Publications from the CBP about the Buffalo and Brownsville crossings, as well as a report on a testing period for the technology at entry points into Arizona and Texas, said the system would attempt to take photos of each occupant of a vehicle entering through certain marked lanes but that travelers may still opt out of the data collection by crossing the border through different gates (archived here, here and here).
A CBP spokesman told AFP in a May 27 email that the collection of biometric data "helps track overstays" and is not a new process. Facial recognition scans already exist at US airports, seaports and for pedestrian crossing the US-Canada border (archived here).
Len Saunders, an immigration lawyer practicing in Blaine, Washington close to the border with British Columbia (archived here), said he had seen travelers prompted to take face scans at nearby crossings when entering on foot, but not by car.
He also remained skeptical on how such technology could be deployed to efficiently detect facial images of people inside vehicles, due to greater logistical challenges than directly scanning faces of air travelers and pedestrians.
"Are they going to hold up a camera and take everyone's picture? Well, if they do that it's going to delay the whole process," Saunders said.
Wired reported the system testing was still turning out errors and that CBP was calling for pitches from tech companies for tools which could scan the faces of people inside vehicles.
US citizens have the option to refuse scans at pedestrian land and air entry points (archived here).
The fact-checking organization Snopes reported Canadian and Bermudian passport holders travelling to the United States for tourism are not required to provide biometric data.
The Government of Canada's online travel advice states most Canadian citizens entering the United States are exempt from biometric collection except those who require a visa or documentation of their arrival and exit dates (archived here).
While most foreign nationals must provide fingerprints under a new registration policy (archived here) for stays in the United States longer than 30 days, the Department of Homeland Security clarified this requirement is waived for "Canadian nonimmigrants" (archived here and here).
For Saunders, new facial recognition procedures do not necessarily raise privacy concerns as travelers already consent to screening when they cross a border, but he said the addition of data collection categories could be "a slippery slope."
Read more AFP's reporting on misinformation and disinformation in Canada here.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
25 minutes ago
- CNN
The kings of Queens: Andrew Cuomo seeks restoration months after Donald Trump's
They are two men from the outer boroughs of New York – both with the Queens accent to prove it, each with his own distinctive rhythm – born of domineering fathers who chose their careers for them and made them righthand men. They revered their fathers but also saw them as not quite ready to do what it took to truly get ahead. One brought his father's real estate empire into Manhattan and turned it into a global brand. The other took his father's political mantle and built a career in both Washington and New York, winning three governor's elections of his own. Both revel in finding weakness and needling those they don't respect. Both can be abrasive, then charming a moment later. Both present themselves as forever underestimated. Both have faced a litany of scandals and been accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women in allegations they both deny and dismiss as politically motivated. Both have small circles of ultra-loyalists and much longer lists of enemies who want them to fail. Now, seven months after Donald Trump won a second White House term that he presented as part vindication, part retribution, Andrew Cuomo is seeking his own restoration. Ahead of Tuesday's Democratic primary for New York mayor, Cuomo has centered his bid on the idea that he alone has the stature and experience to fight Trump. Their lives have intersected and crashed into each other for 40 years – over politics and policy, literal questions of life and death during the Covid-19 pandemic, but also personality and self-assurance that each knows better what their parties, and Americans, want. That worries some who have clashed with both. 'Seeing what I see from Washington, DC, which is only focused on retribution and revenge, there are a lot of similarities in certain people running for the mayor of the city of New York, and I don't need those same characteristics to be revealed in the office of the mayor or the city,' said New York Attorney General Tish James, a longtime Cuomo and Trump critic. For decades, they were competing Macy's Thanksgiving Parade balloon-sized personalities who made the motions of friendship to get what they really wanted. Trump recorded a video played at Cuomo's bachelor party warning him not to cheat. Nineteen years later, Cuomo was one of the guests watching Trump walk his daughter Ivanka down the aisle at her wedding to Jared Kushner. Over that time, Trump donated a total of $64,000 to Cuomo's campaigns. A few days after Cuomo won his third term as governor in 2018, he flew to Washington to have lunch with Trump, where the president greeted him like an old friend. Before walking out of the Oval Office grabbed Cuomo's arm and said, 'Hey Andrew, can you believe this?' The year that defined them both was 2020. As they faced off over immigration, Covid-19, racial justice protests and federal funding for the state of New York, Cuomo would return to the Oval Office for what would be the first of three in-person meetings, along with dozens of phone calls and quite a few tweets. A dozen aides to Trump and Cuomo revealed new details about those run-ins to CNN. They spoke on condition to anonymity to discuss private meetings. Those details may be the guide for what may be ahead if Cuomo becomes mayor and they inevitably meet again. The meeting started with a warm handshake, with the White House photographer right up close to get the smiles. 'You should sit here,' Trump said, pointing Cuomo to one of the chairs in front of the Resolute Desk, according to one person in the room. That morning before heading to the White House, Cuomo had accused Trump of 'extortion': The president was threatening to revoke 'trusted traveler' status for New York, which allowed for Global Entry speeding travelers through customs, if the governor didn't give the administration access to the state's driver's license database. Immigrants without legal authorization can get licenses in New York. Cuomo didn't want the database to be used for immigration raids, but he also didn't want to lose all the international travel business. In the meeting, Trump held up a sheet with three columns of states, arranged by color. All green were giving Trump all the information he wanted. Green and red were mixed. New York, Trump pointed out, was all red. He shoved the chart across the desk at Cuomo. Trump name-checked a few rich New Yorkers who didn't want to have their access to Global Entry shut down. 'It's good leverage,' he pointed out to Cuomo, according to the person in the room. 'You can do this, but we will sue you,' Cuomo told him. By the end, neither the president nor the governor had conceded anything, and aides to both thought they'd outmaneuvered and cornered the other. Trump slid a small stack of red MAGA hats toward Cuomo at the end, talking about his poll numbers and how great his re-election campaign was going to be. Cuomo glanced at them and did not pick them up. Eventually, the administration produced a memorandum of understanding that did not admit doing anything wrong but did back off the threats. A court reinstated 'trusted traveler' later that year. But within weeks, no one was traveling much at all. Trump was on the phone quickly after the first confirmed coronavirus cases hit New York. He had been yelling at rallies that the virus was a Democratic hoax, but to Cuomo, he was asking what the state needed, what he could do to help. Within days, their daily dueling briefings began. Cuomo liked the attention, the sudden nationalization that made him both a social media hero for locked-down liberals, driving Democratic speculation that he could sub in as the Democratic presidential nominee for a man already showing his age, then-former Vice President Joe Biden. Cuomo and Trump watched each other on TV. They went in front of cameras to respond to mock and undermine each other. Then they got on the phone and blew past whatever had been part of the show to talk about what they were going to do. Trump was giving Cuomo's team access to statisticians and academics trying to figure out what was happening. Cuomo was grateful, often telling aides who were running into problems that he'd walk into his office and call the president directly to get them cleared, enjoying being able to bypass what he'd felt was too many steps in dealing with the previous administration of Democratic President Barack Obama. When Trump toyed with blockading New York City, Cuomo wrote a New York Times op-ed with one reader in mind. Trump called him as soon as he saw it and talk of a blockade stopped. Cuomo felt like he was in the catbird's seat, his aides say, of being in a crisis needing something out of a president he was convinced he knew how to work. 'They both understood why each of them was taking the public approach and it didn't really bother them why the other one was saying what they were saying publicly,' a former state official told CNN. Cuomo and a few aides were back in the Oval Office two weeks later to ask for more help. Each state was being allocated 20,000 tests per day, and Cuomo felt the severity in New York should get their allocation boosted to 40,000. Going in, Cuomo had been amused that he and his aides had to test multiple times before seeing the president themselves. Trump was behind the desk again, Cuomo and aides in chairs in front. According to three people in the room, the president kept the conversation loose, armed again with charts and a marker to make points. Trump asked Cuomo if he'd seen the 'Bikers for Trump' rally that had just happened. He asked how Cuomo's mother was doing. Cuomo sat back, letting him go on before interjecting to bring him back to a specific ask. He even brought the president a bottle of New York-branded hand sanitizer. 'They always did that charm dance with each other because they were Queens brawlers,' one Cuomo aide at the time told CNN. Trump asked Cuomo how 'our hospitals' back in Queens were doing. Eventually he agreed to the extra tests, but not extra disaster aid Cuomo wanted too. Trump offered to put Cuomo on the phone with the doctor who'd treated then-British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who had just recovered from coronavirus. On the way out, Cuomo and his retinue ran into Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, according to two people who saw the interaction. Cuomo asked about the disaster relief money, and when he heard it wasn't resolved, brought them back into the Oval Office. Trump, already back in his private dining room watching TV, came back in and agreed to the request. As they left, he gave Cuomo a few extra rapid testing machines they had in the White House for his own use. Cuomo aides convinced themselves that they were being strung along so that Trump would cajole Cuomo to join his own briefing that evening. Trump aides say that was never a possibility. They each did their own briefings after, Cuomo when he returned to New York. Two days after George Floyd was killed, Cuomo was back in the Oval Office. He wanted to get Trump thinking that more federal money for infrastructure projects could 'supercharge' the projects while giving Trump potential accomplishments for an ongoing re-election campaign that appealed to him personally and politically. The meeting did not go well – Trump came in incensed that the New York attorney general had subpoenaed his children and was convinced that Cuomo had orchestrated it, according to top Cuomo aide Melissa DeRosa, who detailed the encounter in her book, 'What's Left Unsaid: My Life at the Center of Power, Politics & Crisis.' But afterward, Cuomo went a few blocks over to the National Press Club in Washington and said it was a 'good conversation.' 'The president is from New York, so he has a context for all these things we're talking about,' Cuomo said. The money never arrived. They talked more when the summer of protests sparked by Floyd's murder began to grow violent in New York. Though things were never as intense there as in other parts of the country, Cuomo responded with a stronger hand than his rival, then-Mayor Bill de Blasio, pushing de Blasio to establish a curfew, moving to send in state police and openly considering sending in the National Guard himself. A few weeks later, Trump was dangling the threat to send troops into more cities. Cuomo called him and told him not to. Trump told him to stop criticizing him publicly. Cuomo backed off. The troops never came. The relationship dissolved again later that summer, when Trump was furious about Cuomo's recorded speech to the Democratic National Convention. Far from the famous rallying keynote Mario Cuomo delivered against Ronald Reagan in 1984, it was still a call to action, and a call to kick out 'a dysfunctional and incompetent' Trump. The president spent the night tweeting furiously about 'the horrible governor.' Since Trump moved troops into Los Angeles two weeks ago to quell protests over immigration enforcement, Cuomo has repeatedly said that Trump didn't do that when he was governor and wouldn't do it if he were mayor. Trump aides question both claims, but Cuomo does have the 2020 parallel to point to. Trump has made clear he wants the operations in Los Angeles to be the first in a series of moves into blue cities. Cuomo has spent the closing weeks of his campaign leaning heavily into anti-Trump talk and warning about repeats of Los Angeles in TV ads, in mailed materials and in comments on the trail. Last month, when word leaked that the Department of Justice was stepping up its investigation into him for possible perjury in congressional testimony over his handling of Covid-19, he linked himself to other Democratic politicians the president has targeted. 'We know Mr. Trump, because this is Trump II. I was there for Trump I,' Cuomo boasted on Thursday at a stop. 'Don't ever forget that we beat Trump once. We're gonna beat him again.' Cuomo's opponents, meanwhile, have said he wouldn't stand up enough, and 'I think New Yorkers are hungry for a different kind of politics,' progressive challenger Zohran Mamdani began one campaign video standing outside of Trump Tower, drawing comparisons between the two of them. Incumbent Mayor Eric Adams, who is seeking reelection as an independent, and others say Cuomo is only running for to line himself up for Trump's current job in 2028. Cuomo, in turns, says his rivals aren't tough enough and recently suggested Trump would cut through Mamdani, a 33-year-old state assemblyman, 'like a hot knife through butter.' He argues repeatedly that his experience is a main reason to elect him. The president was asked in April about Cuomo. Aboard Air Force One, Trump claimed credit for helping New York during the pandemic before offering an apt summary of their relationship. 'I've always gotten along with him,' Trump said. 'We've had our ins and outs a little bit.'
Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Pakistan to nominate Trump for Nobel Peace Prize
By Saeed Shah ISLAMABAD (Reuters) -Pakistan said on Saturday it would recommend U.S. President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, an accolade that he has said he craves, for his work in helping to resolve the recent conflict between India and Pakistan. Some analysts in Pakistan said the move might persuade Trump to think again about potentially joining Israel in striking Iran's nuclear facilities. Pakistan has condemned Israel's action as a violation of international law and a threat to regional stability. In May, a surprise announcement by Trump of a ceasefire brought an abrupt end to a four-day conflict between nuclear-armed foes India and Pakistan. Trump has since repeatedly said that he averted a nuclear war, saved millions of lives, and grumbled that he got no credit for it. Pakistan agrees that U.S. diplomatic intervention ended the fighting, but India says it was a bilateral agreement between the two militaries. "President Trump demonstrated great strategic foresight and stellar statesmanship through robust diplomatic engagement with both Islamabad and New Delhi, which de-escalated a rapidly deteriorating situation," Pakistan said. "This intervention stands as a testament to his role as a genuine peacemaker." Governments can nominate people for the Nobel Peace Prize. There was no immediate response from Washington. A spokesperson for the Indian government did not respond to a request for comment. Trump has repeatedly said that he's willing to mediate between India and Pakistan over the disputed Kashmir region, their main source of enmity. Islamabad, which has long called for international attention to Kashmir, is delighted. But his stance has upended U.S. policy in South Asia, which had favored India as a counterweight to China, and put in question previously close relations between Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. In a social media post on Friday, Trump gave a long list of conflicts he said he had resolved, including India and Pakistan and the Abraham accords in his first term between Israel and some Muslim-majority countries. He added: "I won't get a Nobel Peace Prize no matter what I do." Pakistan's move to nominate Trump came in the same week its army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, met the U.S. leader for lunch. It was the first time that a Pakistani military leader had been invited to the White House when a civilian government was in place in Islamabad. Trump's planned meeting with Modi at the G7 summit in Canada last week did not take place after the U.S. president left early, but the two later spoke by phone, in which Modi said "India does not and will never accept mediation" in its dispute with Pakistan, according to the Indian government. Mushahid Hussain, a former chair of the Senate Defence Committee in Pakistan's parliament, suggested nominating Trump for the peace prize was justified. "Trump is good for Pakistan," he said. "If this panders to Trump's ego, so be it. All the European leaders have been sucking up to him big time." But the move was not universally applauded in Pakistan, where Trump's support for Israel's war in Gaza has inflamed passions. "Israel's sugar daddy in Gaza and cheerleader of its attacks on Iran isn't a candidate for any prize," said Talat Hussain, a prominent Pakistani television political talk show host, in a post on X. 'And what if he starts to kiss Modi on both cheeks again after a few months?"
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The Weekend: Markets on edge as Trump ponders US involvement in Israel-Iran war
The fighting continued to rage in the Middle East this week as Israel intensified its attack on Iran's nuclear capabilities. As European foreign ministers met with their Iranian counterpart in Geneva in an attempt to end hostilities, investors were on tenterhooks about the possibility of the US becoming directly involved. The threat of American intervention was met with outrage in Tehran, with supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei saying such a move would cause "irreparable damage" President Donald Trump has promised a decision on whether to join the assault on Iran within the next two weeks. On Friday he cast doubt over the European diplomacy effort, declaring: "Europe is not going to be able to help on this one." Oil prices continued to climb as traders weighed the likelihood of Iran attacking its Gulf neighbours' production and export facilities or even closing the critical Strait of Hormuz, through which about a fifth of global supply flows. Motorists are likely to feel the pinch at the petrol pump in the coming weeks. Away from the Middle East bloodshed, investors were focused on two crucial central bank rates decisions. Both held no surprises in the end, with the Bank of England holding its key rate at 4.25% and the Federal Reserve standing pat too. BoE governor Andrew Bailey said the world had become 'highly unpredictable' after a decision that was also heavily influenced by stubbornly high inflation. Finally, Nobel laureate Daron Acemoglu sketched out his case for "Remaking Liberalism" – also the working title of his forthcoming book – in a speech on Wednesday at the London School of Economics. Acemoglu, the joint winner of of 2024 Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences, told a packed auditorium that the old version of liberalism was "dead" as the ideas space was being won by those on the right. "I have become convinced over the last decade that liberalism's enormous successes are being overshadowed by some problems," said the MIT professor. Let's take a deeper dive in to some of the main talking points of the last few days. UK consumers braced for petrol price hikes Oil prices have surged over the past week as Iran and Israel continued to attack each other with missile strikes. Concerns are mounting of a disruption to supply, particularly to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a separating Iran and Oman described as an "oil artery". Tom Pugh, a partner at consultancy firm RSM UK, said the main way escalating Middle East tensions would impact UK businesses and the economy "is through higher oil and natural gas prices". "The most immediate impact will be on prices at the pump," Pugh said. "A $10pb rise in oil prices will probably result in a 5p increase in pump prices over the next couple of months." Bank of England holds interest rates at 4.25% amid inflation fears Members of the Monetary Policy Committee voted by 6-3 to keep borrowing costs on hold after cutting them a month ago. The decision had been widely anticipated by markets, particularly following inflation data for May showing prices rising 3.4% — well above the Bank's 2% target. Investors and economists saw little chance of a rate cut, especially with tensions in the Middle East escalating and pushing oil prices higher. Traders are betting there is an 84% chance that policymakers will cut to 4% at the next meeting. Why the UK's AIM is struggling 30 years on Launched on 19 June 1995, AIM was set up to help smaller and high-growth companies get more access to capital. While it has produced a number of successes, it has also had its fair share of failures. These included "cash shell" Langbar International, which claimed to have £370m in bank deposits but collapsed in 2005 after discovering these funds were non-existent. Another high-profile example was the collapse of cafe chain Patisserie Valerie in 2019 on the back of an accounting scandal. Such disasters led to AIM often being described as the "Wild West". Its troubles are far from over, as dozens of companies representing £12.3bn plan to leave the junior market, shrinking AIM is set to shrink by 20%. The oil chokepoint Iran could threaten — but probably won't For decades, strategists have fixated on the channel linking the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea and open waters. The narrow Strait of Hormuz carries about 20% of the world's petroleum and seaborne natural gas shipments, making it the world's single most important passageway for fossil fuel. Iranian is once again threatening to block energy shipments through the strait when involved in some kind of conflict. Such a move would roil energy markets, easily pushing crude prices above $100. But it would also be extremely risky for Iran. "It will be one of the central factors as the US considers whether to join Israel in attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities," Dan Marks of the British think tank RUSI said. Nobel laureate calls for a 'working-class liberalism' In a talk that formed part of the LSE Festival: Visions for the Future, professor Daron Acemoglu said that despite its enormous past success, he's become convinced that the old version of liberalism is dead and needs remaking. Delving into the history and the development of the moral and political philosophy that underpins liberalism, he said it has played a crucial role as a force of good, mostly delivered via a democratic state. "This may come as a shock to some of you, but my view is that right now, new ideas are coming not from the liberal side, but they're coming from the anti-liberal, the right," the best-selling joint-author of 2012's Why Nations Fail, told an enthralled audience. Pension credit is a benefit that aims to boost the incomes of the poorest pensioners. The problem is that, despite government efforts to raise awareness, hundreds of thousands of people who could be claiming it aren't. It not only tops up your income but acts as a valuable bridge to further support, including help with council tax and NHS costs. Pensions columnist Helen Morrissey explained: This under-claimed benefit could help boost your pension Before opening a junior ISA for their child, many parents find themselves wondering – perhaps understandably – how they can be sure they will use the money wisely when they turn 18 and assume control of the funds. The good news is a survey by Hargreaves Lansdown strongly suggests such worries are unfounded. Personal finance columnist Sarah Coles has the details: Why you can trust an 18-year old with their junior ISA Find more personal finance gems here The week will start with the focus on S&P's global manufacturing and services PMI. Despite a slight uptick in May, the reading showed the UK manufacturing sector continued to face tough operating conditions. Economists expect anoter very slight increase in June. Tuesday will see two important speeches from central bank chiefs, in the forms of Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey and European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde. The focus turns stateside on Thursday with a slew of data ranging from home sales to jobless claims. The UK will release quarterly GDP data on Friday, with economists expecting the rate of growth to slow to 0.3% from the first quarter's 0.7%. On the companies front, investors will be looking at Nike's (NKE) latest results for any commentary on how tariff uncertainty is impacting the sportswear giant. In the tech space, BlackBerry (BB) is due to report, having warned of uncertainty going into the current financial year. Chipmaker Micron (MU) is also set to release its latest earnings off the back of recently announcing increased investment in its US operations. On the London market, the focus will be on Babcock International's (BAB.L) full-year results, with the company's shares having rallied this year on expectations of more government spending on defence. Another FTSE 100 (^FTSE) stock in the spotlight will be distribution company Bunzl, which is due to update on trading, following a challenging start to its financial year. Read more: Stocks to watch next week Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data