Civil Rights Organizations Push Back
One of these organizations, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), has filed a lawsuit denouncing what it describes as increased surveillance of immigrants’ social media accounts. According to the EFF, this policy violates the free speech rights of both citizens and non-citizens. If you were hoping you could say anything you wanted online because you were on this side of the border—think again!
This lawsuit aims to stop the State Department’s so-called “capture and revoke” policy, which threatens to strip visas from those whose posts, analyzed with AI, are interpreted as supporting terrorist groups such as Hamas.
What counts as “support”? Well, the definition is pretty broad. For instance, President Donald Trump recently labeled “the Antifa movement” a national terrorist organization.
Digital Surveillance Expansion Raises Alarm
In response to these measures, the protest movement highlights the lurking danger: far-reaching digital surveillance, with the potential to ensnare not just immigrants but their loved ones as well. Advocates stress that these policies represent a real threat to fundamental freedoms.
Social Media, Apps, and Tightening Control
Amid this tense atmosphere surrounding the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, more events have unfolded. On October 14, Meta (parent company of Facebook) confirmed that, at the request of the U.S. Department of Justice, it had removed a Facebook page that was used for tracking the movements of immigration agents.
If you’re thinking it’s all about Facebook, not so fast: earlier this month, Apple and Google both blocked the download of mobile apps designed to alert users of immigration agents’ presence—a move that came mere hours after the Trump administration called for the removal of one particularly popular app.
Round-the-Clock Monitoring Teams
The ambitions of U.S. immigration authorities don’t stop there. They’re also seeking to establish a team working 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to scrutinize social networks and aid their arrest policies. The plan? To hire about thirty private contractors whose job will be to comb through social media and extract actionable information for raids and detentions.
- These teams will scour posts, photos, and messages across platforms like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, and others.
- The goal is to turn public online data into leads for investigations.
It’s a new chapter in the ongoing saga of immigration monitoring in the U.S.—where every tweet, post, or share may be more than just a moment on the internet. It could be a line on a government watchlist.



