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Scroll Through Your Profile Before You Fly: The U.S. Wants to Screen Your Social Media

Perisha Syed by Perisha Syed
June 30, 2025
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With the U.S. now requiring student visa applicants to make their social media accounts public, it’s time to unpack what this means for privacy, policy, and the students caught in between.

US Consulate Visa, U.S.
US Consulate Visa

The US Embassy in Pakistan has recently updated its rules for student visa applicants, and the changes feel less like policy and more like a digital magnifying glass. F, M, and J visa applicants are now required to make their social media accounts public as part of the screening process.

In simpler terms? If you’re coming to study or participate in an exchange program in the US, Uncle Sam wants a front-row seat to your digital life. If your account is private, tough luck. You’ll have to flip it to public, and no, you don’t get to say “close friends only.”

The intention might be framed as “security” or “vetting,” but let’s be honest we all know this is about surveillance. It raises more questions than answers: Who’s going to review these profiles? What are they even looking for? A controversial meme? A retweet? A critical opinion? And why is a country that prides itself on freedom of speech so obsessed with what international students post on TikTok?

Let’s Break It Down: What Are F, M, and J Visas?

If you’re hoping to study or join a cultural exchange program in the US, you’re most likely applying for an F, M, or J visa.

F Visa (For Academic Studies)

This one’s meant for students heading to the U.S. for college, university, or English language programs. To qualify, you need to get into a school that’s officially approved by U.S. immigration (a SEVP-certified institution). If you’re on an F visa, you’re allowed to work on campus, and after some time, you might be able to work off campus too but only under specific conditions.

M Visa (For Vocational Training)

This is for students who are going into hands-on, skill-based programs like flight schools, culinary training, cosmetology, and other non-academic courses. M visa rules are a bit tighter, especially when it comes to work opportunities.

J Visa (For Cultural Exchange)

This visa covers people coming to the U.S. on cultural or educational exchange programs. That includes everything from researchers and interns to au pairs and high school exchange students. It’s supposed to promote international understanding , which feels kind of ironic, considering how these policies are starting to look.

Now that we have that out of the way, time to go forward.

When Freedom of Speech Gets Selective

The United States Constitution, particularly the First Amendment, is famously proud of its protection of free speech, religion, and expression. These rights are considered sacred. But when visa applicants are required to expose their digital lives just to be considered trustworthy, it starts to feel like selective application of those rights.

Demanding public social media is essentially saying, “We want you here, but only if your opinions fit our comfort zone.” That’s not security. That’s censorship in disguise. You can’t promote academic freedom and intellectual openness on one hand, while surveilling someone’s Twitter feed on the other. If anything, it suggests distrust of the very minds the US wants to invite.

And let’s not forget — social media is a curated space. One sarcastic meme, one quote out of context, one political opinion, and suddenly a promising student could be flagged, questioned, or denied. Isn’t that the very thing that authoritarian states do – weaponize opinion?

Are Borders Digital Now?

Traditionally, borders were physical. You crossed them by foot, plane, or boat. But now, they’re algorithmic. Our online presence travels ahead of us – liked posts, Instagram reels, YouTube comments, DMs. It’s all out there, tracked and analyzed. You’re no longer just screened at the airport, you’re screened by your profile picture, your followers, your captions.

In this light, social media becomes a form of digital ID, one that can disqualify you before you even get a chance to explain yourself. So, is this really about safety, or is it about control? Are we slowly stepping into a Black Mirror episode, where your future hinges on what you once tweeted at 2 a.m.?

Will This Become the New Normal?

One big concern is the domino effect. The United States, as a global superpower, sets the tone for many policies worldwide. If it becomes standard practice to vet applicants based on their social media presence, how long before other countries follow suit , especially those where free expression is already under threat?

Authoritarian regimes could point to this policy and say, “Well, if the US does it, why can’t we?” It gives legitimacy to digital surveillance, especially targeting activists, journalists, and students whose work challenges the state narrative. And if the US, a country that markets itself as the land of the free, starts this trend, who’s going to push back?

Chasing Dreams, Not Followers

South Asian and Pakistani students who head to the US often pursue degrees in engineering, medicine, law, humanities, tech, and more. Many go on to become leading professionals in their fields – professors, researchers, business leaders, policy experts. They integrate, they contribute, and they bridge cultures.

But now, they’re being asked to open up their private lives to scrutiny just to be considered. It’s one thing to be transparent about qualifications and background. It’s another to say your online thoughts are the final judge of your worth. These students aren’t influencers or public figures. They’re not auditioning for reality TV. They’re just young people chasing opportunity, and suddenly, their follower count could hold more weight than their GPA.

Fewer students entering the U.S. doesn’t just mean fewer admissions. It means fewer chances for cross-cultural understanding. When young people don’t interact, study together, or live side by side, the room for miscommunication and harmful stereotypes grows. And with policies that feel more like surveillance than welcome mats, many Pakistani students may simply look elsewhere. The UK, China, and Australia already attract thousands; now, Europe may also emerge as a more open and less intrusive alternative. In the end, by demanding public access to private thoughts, the U.S. risks not just losing students, but losing the global goodwill, talent, and perspective they bring.

Education has always been a powerful bridge, one that connects countries, cultures, and generations. For many South Asian and Pakistani students, studying abroad it isn’t just about degrees; it’s about dreams, dialogue, and defining their future. But when entry comes with digital strings attached, those bridges start to crumble. Instead of encouraging open minds, the U.S. risks building digital walls that alienate the very people who could enrich its campuses and communities. At a time when global collaboration matters more than ever, maybe it’s worth asking: are we opening doors, or closing them?

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