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British Airport Will Require Fingerprints From Domestic Passengers
Posted by
Soulskill
on Fri Mar 07, 2008 09:15 PM
from the you-can-trust-us dept.
from the you-can-trust-us dept.
ProfBooty brings us a story about England's Heathrow airport, which will begin fingerprinting passengers on its domestic flights later this month. Airport executives claim that the data will be stored for no longer than 24 hours, and will not be shared with law enforcement. We've previously discussed airport fingerprinting measures in the United States and Japan. Quoting:
"All four million domestic passengers who will pass through Terminal 5 annually after it opens on March 27 will have four fingerprints taken, as well as being photographed, when they check in. To ensure the passenger boarding the aircraft is the same person, the fingerprinting process will be repeated just before they board the aircraft and the photograph will be compared with their face. Dr Gus Hosein, of the London School of Economics, an expert on the impact on technology on civil liberties, is one of the scheme's strongest critics. He said: 'There is no other country in the world that requires passengers travelling on internal flights to be fingerprinted. BAA says the fingerprint data will be destroyed, but the records of who has travelled within the country will not be, and it will provide a rich source of data for the police and intelligence agencies.'"
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U.S. Begins Digital Fingerprinting In Airports 1174 comments
lemist writes "Cross Match has rolled out digital fingerprinting at major airports in the United States according to MSNBC. It's designed to increase border security. They appear to be using Cross Match's Verifier 300 LC. Note that the actual capture of the fingerprint requires no interaction with the device. It determines when the image quality is excellent and grabs it."
[+]
News: Japan to Start Fingerprinting Foreign Travelers 520 comments
rabiddeity writes "If you're planning to visit Japan sometime in the near future, you should be aware of the welcome you'll get. Last year, Japan's parliament passed a measure requiring foreigners to submit their fingerprints when entering the country. The measures, which apply to all foreigners over 16 regardless of visa status, take effect tomorrow. The worst part: the fingerprints are stored in a national database for an "unspecified time", and will be made available to both domestic police and foreign governments."
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So what's the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
And Oceania has always been at war with Eurasia.
I see your fear and raise you Brazil ! (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
I see your Orwellian fear and raise you Brazil !!
Call. Full Gattica! Woo-hoo!
Re:I see your fear and raise you Brazil ! (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
My father works in a particularly bad secondary school in the area and the career aspiration of many of the teenage girls is to get pregnant as soon as they can - and they are OPEN about this with everyone. We are now on a second generation of people that haven't had to work as a result of entering welfare support because of the economy and reforms in the 70s and 80s, and its not doing us any good. The majority of people don't want to learn, nobody has any respect for other people or property, and everything is just getting a mess.
Looking back at documentaries or sitcoms/soaps that demonstrated social issues from 1950-1980 is really quite interesting. How I'd love to experience some those problems over the current situation.
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you get arrested, and they charge you some for some piddling small offense, then you've just gone and screwed your freedom to travel permanently.
Any trip this Briton would make to the USA or another country will now not be eligible under Visa Waiver Programs as a criminal record (when not a driving offence) requires that you obtain a visa to travel. The US embassy visa process takes 31 weeks from end to end (starting to gather pre-requisites through to obtaining a B1/B2 visa in your passport).
And to go through that process I'd have to give a foreign government far more information than that which I would have had to give the people at Terminal 5.
Civil disobedience in this day and age just marks you negatively for the rest of your life. Unless the action is large and total, it just wouldn't work. And most people don't want to fight, they want to get on their plane and reach their destination.
I personally think we've long ago crossed the line into being a surveillance world. All countries, not just the UK.
When I go to the US my details are taken, my fingerprints, photos, credit card numbers that were used to book the flight, which hotel I'm staying at, departure date, hire car details.
It already is the case that every move I make I consider the possible future ramifications of that move and how any action now might affect me in 15 years time.
This all reminds me of the Stasi. We're all spying on each other now, and all of that data business and government hold and will use against use. Be it credit refusal, travel restrictions, political control. We're already there.
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
And the scary part is the word "all". There seems to be no exception, all civilised countries are following the same trend. So you cannot even vote with your feet.
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
And stop flying through Heathrow. Refuse to let them take your fingerprints.
It doesn't take many people to start making this stand and the airlines and airports will start complaining to the Government about their reduced revenue.
No civil disobedience required, just a small amount of personal sacrifice. Or are you personally selling out while decrying the rest of us for doing so?
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
We are fairly far into the rabbit hole at this point.
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Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:So what's the point? (Score:4, Funny)
Of course they can't count beyond 24 hours - Jack Bauer only ever has 24 hours!
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The Point is ... (Score:5, Insightful)
>"Then why are you doing it?"
It's a way of gently easing the metaphorical butt-cheeks of the British public apart. It's what they did with Traffic cameras. First it was just about license plate data for the congestion charge, and we were all assured that it wouldn't capture images of faces or be used by the police ... Fast Forward a year or two, and faces are captured and the police have full unfettered access - to fight terrorism and organised crime ... and petty crime ... and political dissenters ...
They want to have their own way with you, so they open you up with a finger, apply a little lurication and allow you to fully relax before they bring out the truncheon.
Give it a year or so and our collective sphincters will have unclenched and our glorious overlords will tell us they need the data to protect us (coz they really love us) and it'll all be added into our permanent files.
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Re:The Point is ... (Score:4, Informative)
Indeed there is:
http://www.met.police.uk/so/at_hotline.htm [police.uk]
http://observers.france24.com/en/content/20080307-terrorist-campaign-photographers-searched-london [france24.com]
Examples of terrorist paraphenalia include cameras, credit cards, mobile phones, computers, suitcases, cell phones and, err, vans.
This is from the same people who brought us my all time favourite 'public security' campaign:
http://www.art-for-a-change.com/News/eyes.htm [art-for-a-change.com]
'Aren't there cameras that talk back if you get unruly on the street?'
Generally only if the unruly behaviour is caused by mushroom intoxication. But we do have rather a lot of cameras:
http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/article-23391081-details/George+Orwell,+Big+Brother+is+watching+your+house/article.do [thisislondon.co.uk]
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Re:The Point is ... (Score:5, Informative)
"When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty".
- Thomas Jefferson
But then, if Jefferson were alive today he would already be in Guantanamo. Just check out some of the other things he said.
"The two enemies of the people are criminals and government, so let us tie the second down with the chains of the Constitution so the second will not become the legalized version of the first".
"...were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter".
"I hope we shall... crush in its birth the aristocracy of our moneyed corporations, which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength and bid defiance to the laws of our country".
"The strongest reason for the People to retain the Right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government".
"A democracy is nothing more than mob rule, where fifty-one percent of the people may take away the rights of the other forty-nine".
"Experience demands that man is the only animal which devours his own kind, for I can apply no milder term to the general prey of the rich on the poor".
"Conquest is not in our principles. It is inconsistent with our government".
"Experience hath shewn, that even under the best forms of government those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny".
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent".
And, perhaps most relevant of all today:
"If a nation expects to be ignorant and free...it expects what never was and never will be".
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
Our instinct is to take away the weapons of our enemy. But we are horrified to find that they are using freedom against us. We recoil and draw back our trust. No longer can we take the good will of our neighbors for granted. So with the best intentions we seek to contain anyone who throws an ominous shadow.
But the young men who carried explosives onto trains and buses in London did nothing to draw our special attention. The morning of the bombings, they were seen conferring together by surveillance cameras. But human eyes cannot be everywhere. They could have written their intentions directly on the lens of that camera and no one would have noticed until it was all over. The men who boarded those planes more than seven years ago did not trigger any alarms or overwhelm any security systems, they simply bought some tickets.
So we are left with a sobering choice. Do we continue to retract our trust in one another; throwing up human and technological defenses against ourselves? Voluntarily retracting one another's personal freedoms in the hope of leveling the playing field? Or do we make something old, new again?
Though there is certainly a political element to the battle we fight, but the root of the conflict is ideological. Our enemy is not enamored with freedom the way we are. It calls our defense of liberty for all ways of life foolish and self-destructive. There is, after-all, a natural law revealed for all to see, and the failure to recognize and enforce it is the seed of our downfall. Those who threaten our souls should be singled out and punished. It is ultimately our single minded defense of freedom that allows the devil in us to find safe harbor. Perhaps they are right; but only partly so.
Freedom allows the unfettered expression of the best in us as well as the worst. A natural law revealed in the hearts of people around the world is only served by the freedom to express it. What better way to talk truth to power than to do it freely and openly? What better way to aid your fellow man's soul than to do it without fear of reprisal?
But reminding those who would strike down this offering with violence or repression is not enough. We must live the ideal if we are to demonstrate its full potential. Thus we are brought back to our choice.
Continue to limit freedom in the hope of protecting ourselves, or risk our lives by maintaining and expanding it? We have a proud history of defending freedom on the battlefield. Now we must show reactionaries around the world that there is no profit in punishing those who might do harm by limiting the freedom of everyone. We must risk our lives once again by offering freedom to those who would use it to destroy us. We do not have to offer our lives, but we must protect the freedom that might be used by others to take it. What happened in London and New York will happen again, and we must be willing to let it. We cannot search everyone all the time. We cannot watch everyone everywhere. So we must become as selfless as the soldier. We must be willing to die riding on a subway, flying on an airplane or sitting in our homes. We must be willing to sacrifice ourselves to protect that which we hold most dear. We must live free or die.
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Re:So what's the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
Whatever her faults she didn't push this kind of nonsense even after surviving a (real) terrorist attack.
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WTF. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:WTF. (Score:5, Insightful)
Those who are afraid will hand over their liberties to the strong leader who promises to rid them of whatever made them afraid. However, the leader himself has an endless stock of new things to be feared, so the state of emergency persists perpetually. Why else do you think that conservative politicians always run on a law and order platform. Even when crime has been decreasing, they will rename or reimagine some common crime in a way that terrifies people. e.g. "home invasions". Goebbels would be proud.
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Re:WTF. (Score:5, Insightful)
What is next? Retinal scans and Blood samples? Forced embedding of an ID chip?
Well, I admit to be one of those people who complain, yet do little or nothing. I have not written by state rep or senator, I don't organize rallies. Heck, I haven't even created a web page to at least advertise my disapproval.
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Re:WTF. (Score:5, Insightful)
We should be absolutely clear that voting won't work. Those who have the greatest power in our societies have the largest stake in the current system. That's why a political party that ran on a platform of opposing this would find itself marginalized by the news media, or otherwise hog-tied so that it became unelectable. Plus you have all the people like Bob, who are all for it unless they have to make a personal sacrifice.
Yes, it sucks.
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Re:WTF. (Score:5, Interesting)
Is it the teletubbies instilling their gay agenda into the young minds? All the mercury in marmite rotting their brains? The hot East-European chicks infecting the populate with the highly contageous BendOverForAuthoritis?
Why are Britons turning into a bunch of craven pussy chickenshits (for lack of a better word)?
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Re:WTF. (Score:5, Interesting)
Because people wouldn't put up with it back then. The government needed a catalyst for propell this Orwellian state onto people. 9/11 did the job quite nicely. If you look closely, all this "total control" has been creeping into our lives quite slowly over the last 50 years, but it really accelerated after 9/11.
If the U.S./UK governments are responsible for 9/11 is beyond the scope of this reply, but you at least have to marvell at the inguinity of it all, and how it all seemleslly fell into place. Problem-Reaction-Solution, the rest is up to you to figure out people. That is all.
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Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
This scenario of them fingerprinting for domestic flights is a GREAT WAY to desensitize people to such "security measures", so they can take it yet another step further a little while into the future.
As usual, it's a slippery-as-
Re:WTF. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:WTF. (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, AIDS doesnt kill a lot of people in the UK. However, armed police have killed more people in the last five years than terrorists have, and our police are not routinely armed.
The government ARE the terrorists.
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Sure, I believe that. (Score:5, Insightful)
defective by design indeed ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Nothing to add here.
Re:defective by design indeed ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Except why do they need to fingerprint international travellers leaving the country?
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Re: (Score:3)
"Sound bite Security" (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3)
Re:"Sound bite Security" (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, it probably would have. If the 19 terrorists had gone to the next level, and started killing passengers and stews, one a minute until the cockpit door was opened...how long do you think the pilots would have held out? About 2 mins.
Not if I was the pilot.
Your larger point stands, and the fact is, of course, that the threat of 9/11 ended in a field in PA.
But that message doesn't help anyone in office, does it?
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Two words... (Score:5, Funny)
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Police World (Score:3, Insightful)
It's already started (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:It's already started (Score:4, Insightful)
The internet is a good (or perhaps a bad) way to bring together "large numbers" of unsatisfied people. Market niche: web portal that simplifies concerted efforts to reach government officials in both free and not-so-free nations, divided by locale. You heard it here first.
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Re:It's already started (Score:5, Insightful)
No, sir, here's the proper chain of dialog in this situation:
Them: Passport please.
You: Here you are.
Them: Fingers on the reader, please.
You: No.
Them: I can't let you into the country without fingerprints.
You: I'm a British citizen. The passport and photo prove it. Are you going to keep me out of my own country?
Them:
You: I'm a citizen, and I'm suspected of no crime. You have no right to take my fingerprints. I refuse to give them.
Do it calmly and nonviolently.
I suppose they'd arrest you then and get your fingerprints anyway. But if you did it, it would cause a row. If you and 4 other people did it, you might make the news. If you and 19 other people did it, it would certainly make the news. If you got a hundred people together to do it, it would make international headlines. And then things might have a chance at being changed. How much does a flight to Paris and back cost?
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Not too expansive (Score:4, Interesting)
Not like in the US, where if you're in NY, trying to go to LA (or other destinations west), air travel is one of the few options available.
I'm starting to wonder if there's some running joke, or competition, between lawmakers/politicians in the US and UK, seeing who can come up with the most idiotic, errrr I mean, essential to safety and liberty, stresses on freedom. Or maybe they're angling for the population to revolt.
Either way, laws like this win. If you follow them, you'll be safe, and so we must maintain them, because to maintain freedom and safety, we must be EVER VIGILANT. If they are broken, or cause civil unrest, they are justified in their creation, because look how many people there will be who want to wreak havoc on safety and order.
I never fly, unless absolutely necessary. If they want to make poorly thought regulation part of the new safety routine, I don't involve myself.
In other news, pools and cars outlawed (Score:5, Insightful)
This latest scheme in Britain is just one more example of the utter insanity of the masses and their complete and utter inability to make rational decisions. You are radically more likely to be killed by your pool or a car than you are to be struck down by a terrorist. Despite this, we go through insane, fanatical, and expensive measures to prevent one of the rarest ways to die in a western democracy. Death through airplane exploded by terrorist rates somewhere near the absolute bottom in terms of likely ways to die... well below being struck down by lightening.
Honestly, I think that we have seen why democracies don't work. If we continue down this utterly insane path spending more and more resources to defend utterly insignificant attacks with wildly out of proportion, expensive, AND a costly to civil liberties methods, we might actually succeed where terrorist always fail. Terrorist in the west always fail to cause any real significant or costly damage. Even 9/11 was a drop in the bucket next to auto accident, cancer, heart attacks, or hurricanes. Yet, we treat a tragedy that can normally be shrugged off without flinching in such a violent way that we cause incalculable harm to ourselves. The money and lives lost in the response to 9/11 or the London bombings make the actual attacks like like pock change.
It is like getting a pin prick on your finger tip and responding by chopping your own arm off. Uh, yeah, you can't get pin pricked again... but you chopped off your fucking arm.
As much as I want to blame the politicians/corporations/neo-cons/fill-in-evil-entity-of-choice-here, the real problem is democracy. A system that changes itself in response to the utterly stupid and irrational emotions of the masses dooms itself. What is the alternative? The hell of I know. I thought that the US constitution offers up a good alternative to democracy as it seems to be written in pretty clear and absolute language. Despite this, the US has reverted to democracy in its most vile of forms. It might not be as far gone as Britain, but it is desperately trying. I honestly don't know the answer You can't ignore the irrational masses as you will fall into the trap of tyranny. That said, if you listen to the stupid cows, you get this crap, which is tyranny in another form.
Riiiiiight... (Score:5, Funny)
Nudge, nudge, wink, wink.
Another country (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:A list of airports like this? (Score:4, Interesting)
Having traveled a bit, I feel confident saying that Wikipedia's worldwide list of airports [wikipedia.org] is what you're looking for.
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The problem is that you can't trust anyone (Score:5, Insightful)
You make take it as significant that since New Labour came to power there has been a sharp decline in people being ejected from their posts for abject failure, even the guy responsible for the process failures that led to the loss of 2 CDs with the details of several million people on did not actually lose his job after he "resigned", he now works in a much cushier position at Cabinet Office. Yes, that's right, in principle a promotion. That's a subtle hint of how New Labour thinks about privacy.
It follows thus that what Heathrow management says and what really will happen is VERY likely to be different, or it will be a weasel argument as "WE only keep it 24h, but it's not our fault the police takes a copy at 12h and we don't know what they do with it". I hope they have at least the intelligence to store the fingerprints as a hash, but given the predicted leak I am willing to bet that it's full imagery.
And in that case, imagine what may be on the next CDs (sorry DVDs - fingerprints need space) that will be lost? Exactly, the one bit of data you normally control because you have it physically on you, and the one aspect you can't change other than with judicious use of a sharp knife or strong acid (apparently, never felt the need for it myself
I will avoid any route going through terminal 5. What's more, as that is a BA terminal it's a good argument to avoid flying BA altogether - from what I've heard (since the luggage debacle) that's not a bad idea anyway.
Or investigate fake fingers..
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