While planning a visit to the United States,Watch online Fast Lane to Vegas (2000) a British woman unwittingly answered "Yes" to an online travel application query asking if she had ever engaged in terrorist activity.
Accordingly, Mandie Stevenson's U.S. travel application was promptly denied, reports the BBC.
"At first I thought it was a bad dream and then I realised what I had done," Stevenson said on the BBC radio show "Mornings with Stephen Jardine."
Stevenson had been applying for a travel application using the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's Electronic System for Travel Authorization site, or ESTA, when she erred. Specifically, Stevenson was applying for a "visa waiver program," wherein citizens of some countries can enter the U.S. without going through a more tedious visa process.
SEE ALSO: Judge halts grizzly hunting because Yellowstone bears need to find more diverse sex partnersTo rectify the digital mishap, Stevenson had to visit the U.S. embassy in London. There, after a series of interviews, U.S. authorities granted her a travel visa to visit the States, but she had to significantly alter her travel arrangements and fly at a later date. The embassy appointment cost 320 pounds ($416).
And so goes this latest instance of beware of what and where you click -- especially on government websites.
Jennifer Lopez reboots iconic dress that inspired Google Image SearchFaraday Future's new CEO says FF91 production starts September 2020Why the renovated Apple Fifth Avenue store isn't just another storeEven Tom Brady thinks Simone Biles is a superstarStudent creates enormous 'Simpsons' portrait on his college's wintry lawnDirector Lorene Scafaria on the true story and empathy of 'Hustlers'Tom DeLonge from BlinkStudent creates enormous 'Simpsons' portrait on his college's wintry lawnSheryl Sandberg leans into Trump with proCrowdfunded LGBTQ film from India is hoping for a Cannes premiereEverything coming to Netflix in October 2019Mercedes is the latest carmaker that wants in on eAn umbrella blocked people out of a WeWork office for 2 daysSocial Good Summit 2019 highlights leaders in corporate sustainabilityViewers still using TiVo will soon see ads before their recordings8 Revelations from 'Generation Friends'Developer pulls critical code from tech company after ICE contract revealedThis guy could be Cara Delevingne's dadNYC fall theater preview: Tom Hiddletson, Peter Dinklage, and moreMum makes Prince George sailor outfits so your child can dress like the future king Lava from Hawaii's Kilauea volcano spews into a neighborhood Google Assistant takes another major step in its war with Amazon Alexa People are baffled by the costumes in the new 'Robin Hood' trailer Waymo minivan crash video highlights exactly what happened and how Nintendo says Virtual Console isn’t coming to Switch — but don’t worry 'Tully' writer Diablo Cody talks women in film, on screen and off How to watch the Microsoft Build keynote livestreams Puerto Ricans never know if they'll have power. This is how they're surviving. This 'Grey’s Anatomy' yearbook quote about coming out is so, so, so clever Cities strive for improvement after Amazon HQ2 rejection Ryan Reynolds wants a Deadpool Everything new grads need to know about resume Adele threw an opulent 'Titanic' themed party for her 30th birthday 'Destiny 2' expansion 'Warmind' and update 1.2.0, explained What to expect at Google I/O: Android P, Google Assistant, lots of AI The Mountain from 'Game of Thrones' wins World's Strongest Man title Facebook's 'M' assistant might actually have a name Here's what the apartments from 'Friends' might look like today Attorney General Eric Schneiderman accused of sexual assault, resigns Apple's upcoming iPhone X Plus to be the same size as iPhone 8 Plus, report says
2.3563s , 10107.9140625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch online Fast Lane to Vegas (2000)】,Openness Information Network