
South Korean students hire ‘digital undertakers' to bury the past amid US visa scrutiny
South Koreans looking to study in the United States are turning to 'digital undertakers' to scrub their online footprint clean before applying for visas, as President Donald Trump 's administration seeks to significantly tighten its social media vetting.
Last Friday, the
US Embassy in Seoul said it would resume receiving visa applications for students and those on exchange programmes – but applicants would have to give it access to their social media accounts.
'All applicants for F, M or J nonimmigrant visas are required to set their social media posts to 'public' visibility,' the embassy's own social media post read.
For a 28-year-old student who wanted to be known only by her surname, Kim, this requirement comes on top of the already 'daunting task' of working towards her doctoral degree in the US.
People hold up signs during the Harvard Students for Freedom rally in support of international students at the Harvard University campus in Boston, Massachusetts, on May 27. Photo: AFP
After spending 1½ years preparing to apply to a US graduate school, 'I felt like I was ready this year and was going to apply', she told The Korea Herald newspaper. 'But knowing that my social media accounts and the stuff I posted in the past could be an obstacle to me studying in the States and not something like my school grades is really stressful to me.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Standard
5 hours ago
- The Standard
Trump victorious again as US Supreme Court wraps up its term
A general view of the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, U.S., June 1, 2024. (Reuters)


The Standard
12 hours ago
- The Standard
South Korea ex-President Yoon probed over failed martial law bid
South Korea's former President Yoon Suk Yeol arrives at Seoul High Prosecutor's Office to attend questioning after being summoned as part of a probe by a special prosecutor into his botched attempt to declare martial law, in Seoul, South Korea, June 28, 2025. REUTERS/Kim Soo-hyeon


South China Morning Post
13 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Melissa Hortman's ‘best boy' Gilbert lies in state with slain Minnesota lawmaker
Gilbert the golden retriever was home with US Democratic leader and Minnesota State Representative Melissa Hortman and her husband when a gunman fatally shot the couple and mortally wounded their beloved dog. Advertisement And he was with them again on Friday when the Hortmans lay in state at the Capitol in St. Paul. He is all but certainly the first dog to receive the honour, having been put down after being badly injured in the attack. There is no record of any other non-human ever lying in state, and Melissa Hortman, a former state House speaker still leading the chamber's Democrats, is the first woman. The state previously granted the honour to 19 men, including a vice-president, secretary of state, senators, governors and a Civil War veteran, according to the Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Advertisement Hundreds of people waited outside the Capitol before they were allowed into the rotunda at noon to pay their respects.