At the US Border,
Your Camera Roll Isn't Private.
Soccer's biggest summer is bringing millions through US customs — and at the border, an agent can ask you to unlock your phone and scroll your photos. No warrant needed.
They Can Search Your Phone at Entry
US Customs and Border Protection can inspect travelers' devices at the border — including your photos — without a warrant. It's legal, it's documented, and refusing can mean extra screening or delay. Your most private pictures shouldn't be one swipe away.
The Border Is Not the Place to Explain Your Camera Roll
Whether it's intimate photos, a partner's pictures, or anything that's simply nobody's business — the entry line is the worst possible moment for someone else to find them.
Traveling This Summer
Fans and tourists heading to North America for the matches
Soccer's Biggest Summer
Hosted across the US, Canada & Mexico
Warrant Needed
For a basic device search at the US border
Vault Finds & Bundles Them Before You Land
If it's not in your camera roll, there's nothing to scroll.
Vault: Privacy Guardian is the on-device AI that finds your sensitive photos and bundles them — then moves them straight into Apple's own Face ID–locked Hidden album. iOS does the hiding; Vault just makes it one tap instead of hundreds. Nothing is ever uploaded.
🔒 100% on-device. Your photos never touch our servers or the cloud — there's nothing to subpoena, because we never have it.
🎯 Apple's Hidden album can lock your photos away — but your iPhone won't find them for you. Vault does the finding, so nothing slips through before you cross the line.
Built by a proud small team in New Jersey 🇺🇸 & Berlin 🇩🇪 — not Big Tech. Your photos stay on your phone because we genuinely have no way to see them.
