Hi, I'm new here. I'm from the Philippines. Me and my family successfully applied for permanent residency in Canada, and are planning to touch down next month on June 11. We are currently taking down items that we are going to bring to Canada.
My concern though is that many of the devices that we are going to bring to Canada (laptops, smartphones, hard drives, etc.) have videos (movies and TV series), music and video games that either me, my brother or my father have downloaded on the internet via torrent (i.e., pirated). Meanwhile I have very important files like immigration papers and documents for university application both in my laptop and in my external drive, and they're mixed in the devices with the pirated stuff. I've read some things about this, and I've been getting different responses about this scenario.
Generally, to my knowledge, customs officers in Canadian airports would ask people if they can check laptops and external drives, but only in random instances, and from what I've read, rarely.
From some posts in different forums, they say that what the customs officers are really looking for is child pornography and not pirated files. In other posts, they say that they will be checking if you do have pirated files.
Some say that this only happens in Arab Gulf countries and not in Canada. There are some people who say that they carried external drives and/or laptops with them that contain pirated files and they weren't searched. However I suspect that these were people who are not new permanent residents to Canada.
I'm not satisfied with the answers I've been getting, since they are all scattered around the web and I'm not sure if they apply to new permanent residents. This leaves me with several questions:
1. How often to customs officers search through the laptops, devices and external hard drives of new permanent residents?
2. Do customs officers really know if a file is pirated or torrented or not?
3. Would customs officers inspect the device for pirated material if it is listed in the (two) Personal Effects Accounting Document forms B4A and BFE (I'm assuming it's the same as goods to declare)? In connection to that question would I evade customs inspection if I put my laptop and my external drive in my carry-on baggage?
4. Is there any way I could convince the customs people to keep off of my stuff? Would telling them that I have very important files in these devices stop them from searching them?
4. If I really can't have pirated/torrented in my external drive, laptop and other devices, is there a way to preserve around 1TB of files? Or at least have these devices completely clean of pirated stuff and leave the important files in?
Any Filipinos who have had permanent status recently who also brought laptops/external drives/devices with them to Canada can share some experiences on this, as I am very worried about the possibility of getting caught.
Thanks
My concern though is that many of the devices that we are going to bring to Canada (laptops, smartphones, hard drives, etc.) have videos (movies and TV series), music and video games that either me, my brother or my father have downloaded on the internet via torrent (i.e., pirated). Meanwhile I have very important files like immigration papers and documents for university application both in my laptop and in my external drive, and they're mixed in the devices with the pirated stuff. I've read some things about this, and I've been getting different responses about this scenario.
Generally, to my knowledge, customs officers in Canadian airports would ask people if they can check laptops and external drives, but only in random instances, and from what I've read, rarely.
From some posts in different forums, they say that what the customs officers are really looking for is child pornography and not pirated files. In other posts, they say that they will be checking if you do have pirated files.
Some say that this only happens in Arab Gulf countries and not in Canada. There are some people who say that they carried external drives and/or laptops with them that contain pirated files and they weren't searched. However I suspect that these were people who are not new permanent residents to Canada.
I'm not satisfied with the answers I've been getting, since they are all scattered around the web and I'm not sure if they apply to new permanent residents. This leaves me with several questions:
1. How often to customs officers search through the laptops, devices and external hard drives of new permanent residents?
2. Do customs officers really know if a file is pirated or torrented or not?
3. Would customs officers inspect the device for pirated material if it is listed in the (two) Personal Effects Accounting Document forms B4A and BFE (I'm assuming it's the same as goods to declare)? In connection to that question would I evade customs inspection if I put my laptop and my external drive in my carry-on baggage?
4. Is there any way I could convince the customs people to keep off of my stuff? Would telling them that I have very important files in these devices stop them from searching them?
4. If I really can't have pirated/torrented in my external drive, laptop and other devices, is there a way to preserve around 1TB of files? Or at least have these devices completely clean of pirated stuff and leave the important files in?
Any Filipinos who have had permanent status recently who also brought laptops/external drives/devices with them to Canada can share some experiences on this, as I am very worried about the possibility of getting caught.
Thanks