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A Singaporean's guide to living in Thailand

Brain storming in progress :cautious:
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COVID cases in Thailand today:

Total New Cases 13,576 ( -533 )

Deaths 117 ( -5 )

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COVID cases in Thailand today:

Total New Cases 12,709 ( -867 )

Deaths 106 ( -11 )


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COVID cases in Thailand today:

Total New Cases 10,919 ( -1,790 )

Deaths 143 ( +37 )


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COVID cases in Thailand today:

Total New Cases 11,252 ( +333 )

Deaths 141 ( -3 )

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Not take their promise to heart :x3:

 
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COVID cases in Thailand today:

Total New Cases 13,256 ( +2,004 )

Deaths 131 ( -10 )

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Thailand plans to halve quarantine for vaccinated foreign visitors as reopening may be delayed

Thailand is betting on the return of foreign tourists to revive its economy.
Thailand is betting on the return of foreign tourists to revive its economy.PHOTO: EPA-EFE

  • PUBLISHED
    1 HOUR AGO

BANGKOK (BLOOMBERG) - Tourism-reliant Thailand is planning to slash a mandatory quarantine period for vaccinated international travellers to seven days to boost its economy as a wider reopening is seen delayed by a low vaccination rate.

The reduction in quarantine from the current 14 days will help boost Thailand's economy and tourism, according to Dr Opas Karnkawinpong, director-general of the Department of Disease Control.

If a shorter isolation period is approved by the nation's Covid-19 task force, it could be effective from Oct 1, he said.

Under the proposed rules, international travellers with vaccine certificates will still need to be tested for Covid-19 upon arrival and before leaving the quarantine, according to Dr Opas.

Visitors without jab certificates arriving by air will be subjected to a 10-day quarantine, while those arriving by land will have to complete a 14-day quarantine.

Thai officials have signalled a delay to previously announced plans to scrap the quarantine for visitors to several provinces, including Bangkok and Chiang Mai from Oct 1, citing their failure to meet the 70 per cent vaccination threshold for local residents.

Some tourist destinations, including the resort island of Phuket, already allow inoculated visitors to enter without quarantine.

Thailand is betting on the return of foreign tourists to revive its economy as the sector generated more than US$60 billion (S$81 billion) from about 40 million visitors in 2019.
 
COVID cases in Thailand today:

Total New Cases 12.697 ( -559 )

Deaths 132 ( +1 )

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COVID cases in Thailand today:

Total New Cases 11,975 ( -722 )

Deaths 127 ( -5 )

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https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Te...1&pub_date=20210924190000&seq_num=17&si=44594

Thailand's cybersecurity negligence causes personal data breaches
Data law delay blamed for accidental release of records of 106m tourists

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Thailand's cybersecurity readiness is being questioned amid reports that tourists' personal details were recently exposed online. (Nikkei montage/Reuters/AP)
MASAYUKI YUDA, Nikkei staff writerSeptember 24, 2021 13:26 JST

BANGKOK -- Thailand's cybersecurity readiness has come under question, after reports that tourists' personal details were recently exposed online, potentially hurting a much-needed recovery of the key sector.

The information of around 106 million visitors to Thailand was accessible to all on the internet, according to cybersecurity research firm Comparitech earlier this week. The database was discovered by Bob Diachenko, one of the company's researchers on Aug. 22. Thai authorities removed the data the next day, after being alerted by Diachenko.

The 200-gigabyte database contained each visitor's full name, sex, passport number, residency status, visa type, Thai arrival card number, and date of arrival in Thailand. Dates on the records ranged from 2011 to this year.

"We do not know how long the data was exposed prior to being indexed," Comparitech said. The National Cybersecurity Agency of Thailand confirmed the breach, but said it had not found any attempts to sell the data on the internet.

The breach comes at a particularly awkward time for Thailand when it is aiming to gradually reopen to visitors who are vaccinated against COVID-19. Phuket, an island in the south, is its so-called sandbox experiment, having welcomed 35,068 tourists since it fully opened its doors to vaccinated visitors in July.


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Phuket, an island in the south of Thailand, has been open to vaccinated foreign tourists since July but there are now fears that poor cybersecurity could hinder a recovery in the sector. © Reuters

The government now wants to open five more provinces including Bangkok from October to vaccinated tourists. But that plan hangs in the balance, as the vaccination program in Bangkok and those provinces is not expanding at the rate the government had hoped to make viable any reopening.

Reviving tourism is vital to the recovery of Southeast Asia's second largest economy, as the sector and related businesses accounted for 20% of Thailand's gross domestic product before the pandemic hit. Tourists might now be put off by Thailand's poor cybersecurity.

In large part, the data breach can be blamed on the delayed implementation of the personal data protection act. That act was approved by the former junta government in February 2019 and was scheduled to come into full force in May 2020, but was twice postponed to give organizations time and financial room to ramp up efforts. It is now expected to be enacted on June 1, 2022.

Had the law been brought in as initially planned, both the public and private sectors would have upped their game in cybersecurity. Under the act, breaches must promptly be reported to the National Cybersecurity Agency, or parties face fines of 200,000 baht ($5,960). Organizations that have been hacked must show proof of proper defenses against cyberattacks, or face penalties under the law.

The urgency of implementation has been brought to the fore by recent cyberattacks on companies. CP Freshmart, a retail business arm of Charoen Pokphand Foods, said on Sept. 7 that the system containing user information was hacked. Around 594,585 items, including passwords, full names, mobile phone numbers, emails, and addresses, were put up for sale on a black market for data.

The company insisted that no credit card and financial information was stolen. Charoen Pokphand Group is Thailand's largest conglomerate.

Regional airline Bangkok Airways was another recent victim. It sent out an email to some customers on Aug. 28, informing them that passenger names, nationalities, phone numbers, emails, addresses, passport details, historical travel and some credit card information had been stolen.


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Regional airline Bangkok Airways said recently that customer information had been stolen. © Reuters

Indonesia has also recently suffered similar embarrassments. In early September, Indonesian President Joko Widodo's COVID-19 vaccine certificate was leaked online, including his national identity number, the type of vaccine he received, and the time at which he received it. The data was accessible on the Pedulilindungi app, the government's official vaccine monitoring app.

The government sought to play down concerns over data protection on that app by saying that the president's national identity number was available on the general elections commission website anyway, while his date of vaccination was already widely reported on.

"The government urges the public to remain calm and not be provoked by inappropriate information related to the PeduliLindungi system," it said.

The leak came just days after encryption provider vpnMentor said it discovered a breach in the Indonesian government's test-and-trace app for people entering Indonesia. "The app developers failed to implement adequate data privacy protocols and left the data of over 1 million people exposed on an open server," the company said. Leaked data included passenger ID and COVID-19 test results.

"Our team discovered [the app's] records with zero obstacles," it said.

Additional reporting by Shotaro Tani in Jakarta
 
COVID cases in Thailand today:

Total New Cases 12,353 ( +378 )

Deaths 125 ( -2 )

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Tough luck

ASEAN countries lack human capital

Maybe something to do with IQ
and maybe because there is no history of civilizations, of sci tech flourishing in the region.

That's why one of the best ASEAN countries like Thailand also needs tourists to spend their money badly.

This chink virus has hurt much of the world real bad.
 
Until today, there is still no clear cut whether how many days vaccinated tourist or homeward bound thai spouse resident have to quarantine. One minute announcement by CDC, then Gen Prayuth, Health Minister Anutin and tourist promotion board. Really a big headache for all the tourist and homeward bound residents.
 
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