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Privacy Security United States Your Rights Online

Registered Traveler Program Open For Business 262

storem writes "Enrollment into TSA's Registered Traveler program started yesterday at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. Frequent flyers are given the opportunity to sign up for a fast-track system using biometrics to identify themselves. It seems this is pretty much the same system tested in Europe in the s-Travel program. There frequent flyers carried their biometric identifiers (fingerprint & iris) with them between airports on a smart card (privacy reasons)."
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Registered Traveler Program Open For Business

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  • Hmm.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Zardus ( 464755 ) <yans@yancomm.net> on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:23AM (#9557927) Homepage Journal
    If they carried their information with them on a smartcard, couldn't someone edit the smartcard and fake their info?
    • Re:Hmm.. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gregfortune ( 313889 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:31AM (#9557952)
      Not if the data is altered and encrypted by the airlines each time it is accessed. Good luck ending up with the random set of bits that represents someone with a good flying history...
    • Re:Hmm.. (Score:2, Insightful)

      by aixou ( 756713 )
      Yeah, thats awesome.

      We try to get away from cards because of inherent insecurity, and now we entrust biometric info to a card. When will it end?

      Imagine if you were able to bring your own background information with you when you were fingerprinted.

      I thought the purpose of biometric security was to have a database of info about people, not to verify that they are infact the true owner of a card.
    • Re:Hmm.. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by WiPEOUT ( 20036 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:45AM (#9558005)
      This is how I'd envision it working:

      1. your biometric details are stored on the smart card
      2. your flight history is also stored on the smart card
      3. each time you use the card, it reads biometric data on the card, checking it against that read from you by fingerprint/iris sensors
      4. then, it reads all information on the card and MD5/SHA1 hashes it. If it matches the hash stored in the database, and if biometric data checks out, it adds current flight information/status to the card, calculates an updated hash (including the new information), and stores this hash (which is propagated to other airports)

      This way, your biometric data and flight history is never stored by the system, maintaining your privacy, but is available from your card as necessary. Your card cannot be forged as the hash will be different if any bit of data on your card is changed, and will not match that on record.
      • Re:Hmm.. (Score:2, Insightful)

        by fatgeekuk ( 730791 )
        I started this message very critical of the system as it currently stands, but in writing this comment, I have reviewed the ultimate goals.

        There are ways to crack or spoof this system. It is far from secure and should not be considered by anyone as foolproof.

        It is a compromise between security and personal freedom and as such may serve neither.

      • Re:Hmm.. (Score:3, Insightful)

        by psoriac ( 81188 )
        This way, your biometric data and flight history is never stored by the system, maintaining your privacy, but is available from your card as necessary.

        You must be new here...

        In all seriousness, do you for one second believe that the current government security agencies under Bush gave any thought at all to protecting your privacy? Your entire flight history including biometrics is probably stored, unencrypted, in some government database from the moment you sign up until your death. And probably well bey
        • I don't think you'd even need to look to the government to find this. Having all this data sounds potentially useful for the airlines and airports themselves, for marketing and whatever other purposes. It seem inevitable that that someone will notice that disk space is really cheap, and decide it would be convenient and helpful to go ahead and store the data in the airlines and airport's databases in addition to on the card. They may even offer this as a service you can pay for, to restore the data from
      • and you actually expect this database to remain up to date and current, and the system to be online and working reasonably well? Have you flown lately? This would require instantaneous updates or it loses its usefullness. What good is it if after I make a layover my hash has changed but the new airport doesn't have the updated one.
        • Let's not engage in hyperbole here. You only need the information to get to the new airport in time for the next time you go through security. I, for one, rarely go through security twice in a day. In practice, if the updates take about four hours to propogate, all will be well. Hardly "instantaneous".

          And if they don't get there in time, the worst-case scenario should be that you end up going through the same security rundown everyone else goes through.
  • by Doc Ruby ( 173196 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:23AM (#9557930) Homepage Journal
    Now planebombers need to practice their routes more than before, establishing their frequent flyer status. Their biometric IDs will ensure that only the suicidal dupe is making the runs. At least the final flight will be recoupable in earned mileage. Saudi oil billions will buy only so much air travel.
    • by chaffed ( 672859 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @03:09AM (#9558076) Homepage
      But with the extensive use of blackout dates by the airlines. I think we will be safe everyday but the week you are allowed to use your miles.

    • by jkitchel ( 615599 ) <jacob_kitchel@ho ... m minus math_god> on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @03:15AM (#9558090)

      That's a pretty good point.

      What do you suggest the government do instead or in addition to this? For me, right now, nothing comes to mind that anyone would be happy with (but hey, it's late)

      Does anyone else have any ideas to:

      1. Improve
      2. Reorganize, or
      3. Change
      this process?
      • by SideshowBob ( 82333 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @04:45AM (#9558301)
        Hmm. Maybe the U.S. could, I don't know, improve its relationship with the rest of the world to the point that they don't want to kill us all?

        Some ideas:

        1. Avoid installing or supporting despotic dictators that repress their own citizenry and exploit the resources of their nation for personal gain.

        2. Avoid bombing the crap out of countries that haven't attacked us.

        3. Avoid making up intelligence about other countries and then using that fake intelligence as an excuse to invade them.

        4. (It really amazes me as an American that it has come to the point where we have to even talk about this, but) avoid torturing citizens of other nations.

        Just a few pointers, hopefully that will get us started in the right direction. Maybe its time to get back to that whole idea of making the world a better place and promoting liberty and democracy by setting an example?
        • by The Tyro ( 247333 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @05:48AM (#9558468)
          Nobody is liked by everyone... the diversity of ideas and viewpoints on a planet with multi-billions of people will absolutely ENSURE that someone, somewhere, hates you. Besides, does being unpopular justify violent action?

          Just a couple of comments.

          1. Fair point... I'll grant you this one.

          2. In the right circumstances, I fully support preemptive war, just as I endorse police officers not waiting until they're shot at to shoot back (as a former SWAT officer, I've personal experience with this one). Giving your enemies the first punch is stupid; I can't see sacrificing lives on the basis of either indecision or moral cowardice.

          3. Intelligence is often nothing more than a best guess. Occam's razor may be appropriate here... don't attribute to malice that which is explained by simple incompetence.

          4. Avoid torturing? Good advice, and probably followed by the vast, overwhelming majority. But defining torture... and whether it's ever permissible is a great debate. Rhetorically, a case can be made for torture in some circumstances (if a terrorist knew where a nuke was, and refused to divulge that info, is torture justifiable? Does the tiny private moral victory of "I'm a good person... I don't torture others" drown out the screams of the millions you might be sacrificing by staying within your own moral comfort zone?) I honestly don't know the answer to that one. As technology progresses, and the technological bar to enter the nuclear-club gets lower and lower (and as nukes proliferate, ala AQ. Khan), that scenario becomes plausible... Seriously... what would you do?

          • by Ba3r ( 720309 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @06:12AM (#9558538)
            I am not trying to start a flame war here (hows that for a pre-emptive strike! :)

            On 2: As a police officer you should also have heard of 'innocent until proven guilty'; someone is innocent until the situation is fully ascertained (not when you are first storming the building) or when a crime is blatantly committed (you are fired upon). Until then, any assumption of guilt is purely circumstantial, and thus not worthy of punishment. There is an acceptable level of uncertainty on the police officer level, but not in the international policy level.

            On 3. I agree with you on the nature of intelligence, just wanted to be a pain, and point out you meant Hanlon's Razor' [wikipedia.org], not Occam's Razor [wikipedia.org].

            On 4. The classic argument for torture (terrorist, nuclear bomb, 3 hours before detonation.. heated argument in philosophy 101) is hardly applicable to the current problems encountered in Iraq. I am sure you read the articles, so I am sure you remember that a large number of young men, who may have been invovled in attacks on soldiers were tortured and humiliated, although many of the soliders admitted to not doing it to extract any information. The problem here is that torture was the rule, not the exception.
            • I love a good preemptive flamewar.

              2. "Innocent until the situation is fully ascertained" can't really exist on the street... things happen too quickly (unless you want to sacrifice a lot more police officers than already die each year). When a cop sees a guy coming with a knife or a gun, he has to choose in a split second. Maybe the person was simply bringing the gun to the police officer, (or it was a toy gun, or they were just joking, or, or, or...) but that's just the way it goes. Innocent until pro
              • "Innocent until proven guilty is great... but" -- the raison d'être
                of every police state.
                • This is simplistic. Currently the police can hold a person in prison without bail for being suspected of a crime (though not yet proven) while awaiting their trial. BUT it's only if they state has gathered enough evidence to suspect the person of the crime.

                  Now, they're still considered 'innocent', but they're not exactly free anymore are they? This is the 'BUT'.
                  • Actually, the "but" above referenced gunning down a suspect in the street...
                    • Yes, but it's the same 'but'. There is no black and white here. There's many shades of gray. A guy pulls a gun on a cop, says "I'm going to shoot you." Should the cop wait until (s)he's shot just so they can be sure the guy is guilty? If so, we're going to have a difficult time convincing people to be police...
          • Oh puh-lease (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Moraelin ( 679338 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @07:30AM (#9558724) Journal
            Let me tell you something about torture.

            It's only good for one thing: getting some innocent bugger to "confes" anything you want to hear, so you can then hold a fake trial and execute them. That's why it's been used so much for the last 10 millenia or so, and is still loved by dictators.

            Think just of the _millions_ (literally, and we even have the records) who confessed to flying on broomsticks, having sex with the devil, summoning vile demons and plagues, signing pacts in blood with Satan, etc, at the hands of the Inquisition. Stuff that isn't even physically _possible_, but enough torture got that crap "confessed" anyway. That's the kind of bullshit that torture produces.

            You get a fellow snug on a rack and torture them enough, they'll tell you any _lie_ you want to hear, just to make it stop. You just have to bring them to the point where even death looks like a nicer alternative.

            But for actually obtaining _intelligence_ it's fucking useless. What you get is whatever _you_ had already decided you want to hear, not trze information you didn't know. I.e., you could just as well just act on your mis-conceptions and prejudice, and spare the torture part, since you'll get exactly there anyway.

            So you know what will actually happen in your "terrorist with a nuke" scenario? You'll torture some innocent arab who probably didn't even like the fundamentalists at all in the first place. And you'll keep torturing him until he tells you whatever false "confession" you wanted to hear, just to make the pain stop.

            Will you find your nuke? No fucking way. But now you have a "confession" so you can execute or deport an innocent.

            Well gee... if that's what the "land of the free" is supposed to mean...
          • 2. In the right circumstances, I fully support preemptive war...

            Expanding on this idea, the person who you shoot at, who may or may not be armed, is going to be seriously wounded or killed by your actions. An eye for an eye and the whole world goes blind. Too many innocent and often unarmed people, mostly black or minority, have been shot by people such as yourself (grandparent post) who are only too willing to justify pulling a trigger in the name of...whatever cause you feel you are defending.

            4. Avoid t

          • 3. Intelligence is often nothing more than a best guess.

            The bush administration and the CIA under it has completely forgotten that intelligence is more than gathering information. Intelligence is about being smarter than the enemy and making sure they know it only when its appropriate. Intelligence would have been leaflet bombing in Iraq as was done in Afghanistan (which successfully softened the early ranks of soldiers who didn't really want to be there). It would have also been a campaign of confus
          • That's not Occam's razor- although it is commonly misunderstood as such.

            Occam's razor is:
            "plurality should not be posited without necessity." OR simply "Don't do something with more if you can do it with less".

            Your quote, "don't attribute to malice that which is explained by simple incompetence." is a misquote of Hanlon's Razor and is actually probably borrowed from the sci-fi Robert Heinlein (both men say "stupidity", not incompetence). See:
            http://www.jargon.net/jargonfile/h/HanlonsR a zor.ht ml

            I fully
        • 1. Avoid installing or supporting despotic dictators that repress their own citizenry and exploit the resources of their nation for personal gain.

          Such as Stalin. Never should have allied with that guy. The world would be so much better off if we'd let Hitler take him out.

          2. Avoid bombing the crap out of countries that haven't attacked us.

          Such as Serbia and Somalia? I know you don't mean Iraq, since a US Federal Court has found they financed Al Qaeda and it's been upheld by the Appeals Court.

          4. (I
      • The US government should:

        1> Dump the Iran/Contra style "shadow government" parts of the CIA that support only global corporate covert actions
        2> Make the CIA, NSA and other intelligence agencies primarily accountable to Congress, rather than the President
        3> Destroy the Pakistani ISI, which backs the Taliban, Al Qaeda, and the global network of nuclear weapons suppliers
        4> Force the Saudis to create a Parliament that controls its own intelligence services
        5> Back several competing democratic fac
      • What do you suggest the government do instead or in addition to this?

        Do about what? Do you seriously think that someone could successfully pull off another 9/11 style attack? The world changed a few minutes after it became common knowledge that hijacked planes could be used as missiles. Witness the UA flight 93, crashed by the hijackers when passengers learned about the WTC and Pentagon planes. Or how about this [nzherald.co.nz] crazy?

        So given how hard it's become hijack planes, what exactly is the point of this trac
  • by tarunthegreat2 ( 761545 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:24AM (#9557932)
    If your aim is to use the plane as a suicide bomb, will it matter to you if are fingerprinted? The people who were behiond 9/11 weren't known terrorists/criminals. They were quiet people, under the radar....
    • by gregfortune ( 313889 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:34AM (#9557965)
      It doesn't.

      It does establish your identity though and reduces the time necessary for that task. Now, what might the airline do if it had some extra time for each person?
    • by bgeer ( 543504 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:50AM (#9558017)
      Exactly. Now all the terrorists have to do is get into the registered traveler program and since they're searched less thoroughly they'll have a very good chance of sneaking weapons in. This system nearly the same as CAPPS, the only difference is that terrorists will definitively know that they've been whitelisted and will therefore be even more confident that they can bring weapons with them. Since this system still relies on whitelisting, the Carnival Booth [mit.edu] argument still applies and this system is still weaker than random searches.
    • by NanoGator ( 522640 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @03:28AM (#9558137) Homepage Journal
      "If your aim is to use the plane as a suicide bomb, will it matter to you if are fingerprinted?"

      Where in the article does this promise to make terrorism harder?
    • What the fuck...this always amuses me.
      They were known terrorists and criminals and were on several watch lists.

      The problem isn't flying or airport security...its the fact we knowingly let these fucks come into the country in the first place. We knew they were here and tried to keep "an eye on them". They shouldnt have been allowed in anyways.
    • Nah, hijacking planes are passe. It's been done before and it's now expected, so why go the hard route when there are so many good targets still unguarded? Why not attack an undefended tunnel [nycroads.com] instead? In fact, it's kind of been done before, only then it was by accident. Scroll down to the "Tunnel Threatened" section with the paragraphs of blue text. Here's the summary:

      "On May 13, 1949, a chemical truck loaded with 80 drums of carbon disulfide burned on the New Jersey side of the south tube, destroying
    • The people who were behiond 9/11 weren't known terrorists/criminals.

      This is a false statement. Some were in fact known terrorists. In fact, some had been previously denied Visas under other names.

      They were quiet people, under the radar....

      Which is exactly why they wouldn't apply for these cards; the risk of exposure would be too great.

      Therefore, they'd still be subject to random search, and they'd be more likely to be searched because the pool would be smaller, since so many people would have been
  • by Ratface ( 21117 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:25AM (#9557937) Homepage Journal
    I don't see how this solves a problem. A businessman of ethnic background working in the Middle East and flying regularly will not be possible to distinguish from a terrorist posing as a businessman.

    Or perhaps the hidden subtext is "The biometrics signatures will enable white non-suspicious regular travelers to whizz through customs while suspiscious non-whites are filtered for more efective controls by customs".

    Other than that possibility, I have nothin per-se against biometric controls - it's how they are used and who by that's the problem.

    • by genixia ( 220387 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:32AM (#9557955)
      No, the hidden subtext is "We really want to make this compulsory but cannot. So we'll give people the chance to opt in and over time make it really inconvenient for those who choose not to until eventually everyone opts in just to avoid the hassle."

      Been through a fast-lane enabled toll booth recently? The cash lanes are getting fewer and slower all the time.

      • the hidden subtext is "We really want to make this compulsory but cannot. So we'll give people the chance to opt in and over time make it really inconvenient for those who choose not to until eventually everyone opts in just to avoid the hassle."

        It should be obvious that the quick check in is temporary at best. The long lines at airports have little to do with making sure you are who you say you are and everything to do with government interference. Long lines at airports are the result of a federally i

    • But they'll still know he is that businessman from the Middle East rather than a random dude who decided to pose as a business man. Establishing identity is a cruicial step in any security system and while it doesn't solve the problem directly, it will help reduce resources needed to establish identity. It also raises the bar for the terrorists a tad.
      • Indeed - this businessman's smart card may well encode "Search me!" and he won't know it for sure.
        • Indeed - this businessman's smart card may well encode "Search me!" and he won't know it for sure.

          Until he notices this is the second and third time he's been hauled off to the side for a "random" exam on this trip. And come to think of it, last time he flew he got hauled off to the side for random searching. That's how I figured out I was in CAPPS.

      • by kfg ( 145172 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @03:20AM (#9558111)
        Raise the bar high enough that everyone's equally suspect and no one stands out as a suspect either. We're right back where we started, except more repressive. In a sense this makes things easier on potential terrorists as the rules are more overt, rigid, and thus defined and gamable.

        Raise the bar higher and everyone is treated like a criminal, but the criminals are the only ones that don't mind.

        KFG
      • How does establishing identity help in the slightest when the stated aim is to prevent another plane-as-suicide-bomb attack. The answer is that it doesn't in the slightest, as many others have pointed out, and may in fact be detrimental. The only reason I can see is that it makes the travellers *feel* safer, and has side effects in reducing other types of crime such as smuggling. It does not raise any bar except that under which I must contort myself when visiting the US.

        • " How does establishing identity help in the slightest when the stated aim is to prevent another plane-as-suicide-bomb attack."
          It doesn't. Except maybe, if the authorities want to know who that was flying a plane into a building.
          Also, why would a terrorist attack a harder target? Why would they target planes again when there are lots of other different and less watched targets?
          It doesn't make sense to me to spend lots of money on a slim risk that someone malicious _could_ be on a plane and _could_ be planni
  • nice try (Score:3, Insightful)

    by corian ( 34925 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:25AM (#9557938)
    There frequent flyers carried their biometric identifiers (fingerprint & iris) with them between airports on a smart card
    Actually, we carried our biometric identifiers on our FINGERS and our EYES. That's the whole point, you see?
    • Re:nice try (Score:2, Insightful)

      There frequent flyers carried their biometric identifiers (fingerprint & iris) with them between airports on a smart card.
      Actually, we carried our biometric identifiers on our FINGERS and our EYES. That's the whole point, you see?

      That's what I'm wondering about. Since we carry our fingers and eyes with us, why is a card necessary? A card can be manipulated, probably more easily than someone can fool a fingerprint/iris scanning machine with an airport agent watching.

      Aside from creating a fast-track f
      • Re:nice try (Score:4, Insightful)

        by tftp ( 111690 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @03:20AM (#9558114) Homepage
        The card is necessary because it's awfully expensive to check relations of one pair of eyes against 260,000,000 pairs of eyes. You'd need a lifetime to do that.

        However if the card says "I am John Smith, iris 0x1234ABCD5678FEDC" then it is trivial to pull the said iris' pattern out of the central database and check your real eyes against that trusted copy. By changing the direction of search they simplified the task immensely.

        Besides, right now there is no central d/b yet, and all passengers carry their pieces of the database with them. This won't last, though - it is far more practical to have the database centralized. Then even a nudist can fly, as long as he remembers his SSN. Maybe that's the whole point, after all :-)

        • But what good does this do then? There's no mention of any background checks to issue the card. How does "I am the person whose name is on the card I am carrying" do anything for security? All that would do is confirm someone's name. If the document submitted to get the card itself is faked, there is no security.

          ID checks can only provide security IF the correlate with some external database -- that flags known offenders. The identity of those providing biometrics acn be compared against that databas
        • "The card is necessary because it's awfully expensive to check relations of one pair of eyes against 260,000,000 pairs of eyes. You'd need a lifetime to do that."

          You only need to check relations of one pair of eyes against the one pair of eyes on record.
    • Re:nice try (Score:4, Insightful)

      by RollingThunder ( 88952 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:41AM (#9557990)
      From the sound of the phrasing (I haven't RTFA), it would seem to me that the card is a relational link between your biometrics and the record in the database.

      Without the card, they can't peg that ID number 481453 is John Smith. That's the privacy aspect.

      The card has your biometrics on it to let them verify that you are the proper bearer - they compare it's digital copies of your biometrics to the real deal, then they know that you actually are the person that 481453 refers to, and so the green light actually applies to you.

      As I say, that's just how I interpret the submission. It's probably totally wrong.
  • by gregfortune ( 313889 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:27AM (#9557945)
    The only problem with an optional service that has an advantage over the standard service (ie, shorter lines...) is that it might become the defacto method over time. If enough people agree to the tracked biometrics, the entire system will inevitably switch over to biometrics.

    And I'd probably defect to the "convenience" side myself if I were flying fairly often. Not really that different than the privacy invasion I tolerate for using a credit card. Boy do we pay for our conveniences in the long run...
    • Not really that different than the privacy invasion I tolerate for using a credit card. Boy do we pay for our conveniences in the long run...

      How is a credit card even remotely convient? You get to swipe your card a few dozen times on the barely-working card reader. Try to decipher the words on the screen, hidden behind the massive scratches, show some photo-ID. Fill out an extra page of forms, etc.

      Yeah, real damn convient... I know if I have to choose between two check-out lines, I don't choose the li

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:37AM (#9557979)
    If a person looks at the definition of a police state [thefreedictionary.com], it would seem that we are darn near to becoming fully certified.

    Or one might simply peruse a copy of Huxley's [huxley.net] prophetic Brave New World...

    And wonder how are the themes of Brave New World any different than the themes of the US government (or any government) of today?

    The Themes of Brave New World

    1. COMMUNITY, IDENTITY, STABILITY- VERSUS INDIVIDUAL FREEDOM

    Community, Identity, Stability is the motto of the World State. It lists the Utopia's prime goals. Community is in part a result of identity and stability. It is also achieved through a religion that satirizes Christianity- a religion that encourages people to reach solidarity through sexual orgy. And it is achieved by organizing life so that a person is almost never alone.

    Identity is in large part the result of genetic engineering. Society is divided into five classes or castes, hereditary social groups. In the lower three classes, people are cloned in order to produce up to 96 identical "twins." Identity is also achieved by teaching everyone to conform, so that someone who has or feels more than a minimum of individuality is made to feel different, odd, almost an outcast.

    Stability is the third of the three goals, but it is the one the characters mention most often- the reason for designing society this way. The desire for stability, for instance, requires the production of large numbers of genetically identical "individuals," because people who are exactly the same are less likely to come into conflict. Stability means minimizing conflict, risk, and change.

    2. SCIENCE AS A MEANS OF CONTROL

    Brave New World is not only a Utopian book, it is also a science-fiction novel. But it does not predict much about science in general. Its theme "is the advancement of science as it affects human individuals," Huxley said in the Foreword he wrote in 1946, 15 years after he wrote the book. He did not focus on physical sciences like nuclear physics, though even in 1931 he knew that the production of nuclear energy (and weapons) was probable. He was more worried about dangers that appeared more obvious at that time- the possible misuse of biology, physiology, and psychology to achieve community, identity, and stability. Ironically, it becomes clear at the end of the book that the World State's complete control over human activity destroys even the scientific progress that gained it such control.

    3. THE THREAT OF GENETIC ENGINEERING Genetic engineering is a term that has come into use in recent years as scientists have learned to manipulate RNA and DNA, the proteins in every cell that determine the basic inherited characteristics of life. Huxley didn't use the phrase but he describes genetic engineering when he explains how his new world breeds prescribed numbers of humans artificially for specified qualities.

    4. THE MISUSE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL CONDITIONING Every human being in the new world is conditioned to fit society's needs- to like the work he will have to do. Human embryos do not grow inside their mothers' wombs but in bottles. Biological or physiological conditioning consists of adding chemicals or spinning the bottles to prepare the embryos for the levels of strength, intelligence, and aptitude required for given jobs. After they are "decanted" from the bottles, people are psychologically conditioned, mainly by hypnopaedia or sleep-teaching. You might say that at every stage the society brainwashes its citizens.

    5. THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS CARRIED TO AN EXTREME A society can achieve stability only when everyone is happy, and the brave new world tries hard to ensure that every person is happy. It does its best to eliminate any painful emotion, which means every deep feeling, every passion. It uses genetic engineering and conditioning to ensure that everyone is happy with his or her work.

    6. THE CHEAPENING OF

  • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Get with the program, that's too difficult.

      Option 1.
      Convince man, whose family you've just murdered by way of collateral damage, that you're actually nice guys at heart.

      Option 2.
      Throw tax dollars on expensive security programs which will only keep half the mad men out.

      DUH! You must me new here!
      Well I for one welcome our fingerprint, retina-scanning overlords
      In Soviet Russia, the Retina Scans YOU!..oh wait..
    • Re:Here's an idea (Score:3, Insightful)

      by NanoGator ( 522640 )
      "...shouldn't we concentrate more on doing things to make mad people NOT want to blow us all up?"

      Like caving in to extremist demands?
    • Re:Here's an idea (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      I wish we could. The problem is that the people who want to blow us up want to blow us up because they believe God told them to. There's not a damn thing you can do about that. There is no rationality here...there's no "let's sit down and talk about it, and you'll see God doesn't really want you to kill people."

      Before this, we fought the Soviets. Well, that was a political system. There was nothing sacred there. Eventually, the people came to realize that a capitalist democracy is superior to a commu
      • So, we've got two options: tear down Islam, or kill the militant Muslims. What's your choice?

        How about fix this problem:

        Ultimately, the problem is that Islam never had a reformation.

        I agree with your post's spirit; that is, it's a religious issue and no amount of talking/bombing will change fanatics' minds. But the answer is not an eradication of Islam; rather, it should be a re-evaluation of Islam by its leaders.

        It's really a testament to the solidity of its faith-system that Islam has lasted as lo
    • by evilviper ( 135110 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @04:49AM (#9558312) Journal
      shouldn't we concentrate more on doing things to make mad people NOT want to blow us all up?

      Yes, exactly. Everyone who is currently getting instructions from their dog to kill people, gets a coupon for one free popscicle...

      Problem solved!

  • by serutan ( 259622 ) <snoopdoug@NoSPAm.geekazon.com> on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @02:56AM (#9558040) Homepage
    This seems like it was designed by Microsoft -- let's make the system more secure by adding ways to bypass it in the name of convenience! I feel much better about flying now.
  • From the CNN article:
    • "The designated checkpoint won't open in Minneapolis for a couple of weeks, and only travelers who consider it their home airport will be able to use it. In turn, Minneapolis passengers won't get special access at the other airports."

    Now, what is the reasoning behind this? Why can people registered only use the designated checkpoints at their "home" airport? For folks who frequently travel across the country, will saving half an hour at one measly airport be worth giving a gove

    • Why can people registered only use the designated checkpoints at their "home" airport?

      I guess they have only very few airports equipped with iris and fingerprint scanners. So they want to maximize the efficiency of this beta-testing by ensuring that people who sign up *will* be using the system. Nothing suspicious in that.

  • by momogasuki ( 790667 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @03:00AM (#9558054)
    With my luck, I will show up at the airport and then realize that I left my fingers and iris at home.
  • Watch out (Score:3, Insightful)

    by tftp ( 111690 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @03:07AM (#9558070) Homepage
    Within a few years this "innovation" will be mandatory, and nobody will be allowed to fly without it.
  • I think keeping the information closer to where it is used is much better. They could simply have a card with a persons ID#, and then when they go...they put the card in, give and iris and fingerprint scan. That way we don't have to worry about it being hacked.

    I believe every programmer knows that giving variables to the client are less safe then keeping them on the server, even beginners such as myself.
  • MultiPass (Score:4, Funny)

    by axonal ( 732578 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @03:18AM (#9558101)
    I can see how insecure this will all wind up being.

    Leeloo Dallas, Multipass.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @03:19AM (#9558106)
    I read in today's San Fransisco Examiner , page 3, PJ Corkery column 6-28-04:

    Then I wish [visiting] Bill Clinton could roam the streets of SoMa, where he might spy the posters showing the hooded, bewired Iraqi prisoner, with the angry caption, "Got Democracy?" The posters are the work of Robert Mailer Anderson, the gifted and funny novelist of Northern California ("Boonville", Mr. President, is Anderson's terrific novel about growing up as the child of especially narcissistic and narcotized Baby Boomers). Those posters were prompted by Anderson's on going concern about civil liberties, a concern sharpened into dismay when, while trying to board a plane last month, he was told that his traveling companion was on the government's "No Fly List" and could not alight the plane. Who was this suspect traveling companion, this possible terrorist?... Anderson's two-year old daughter, that's who. This toddler was identified by name as one too dangerous to let on a plane."

    These are the people you're paying billions in taxes to for Homeland Security?
    • by Anonymous Coward
      he was told that his traveling companion was on the government's "No Fly List" and could not alight the plane. Who was this suspect traveling companion, this possible terrorist?... Anderson's two-year old daughter, that's who. This toddler was identified by name as one too dangerous to let on a plane."

      Do you know how nasty and obnoxious and disruptive two-year olds can be? They don't call it "terrible twos" for nothing! Those little terrorists!

    • Who was this suspect traveling companion, this possible terrorist?... Anderson's two-year old daughter, that's who. This toddler was identified by name as one too dangerous to let on a plane.

      It's his own damn fault for naming his daughter "Osama bin Laden"...
  • by teamhasnoi ( 554944 ) <teamhasnoi AT yahoo DOT com> on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @03:44AM (#9558180) Journal
    Could the government FOR ONCE come up with an idea that does not totally EAT MY BALLS?

    You'd think that with the hundreds of thousands of people in government, one could have an idea that actually does what it is supposed to, without ulterior motives?

    Why are we confiscating fingernail clippers? To protect against hijacking, or to touch everyone in some small way and remind them of exploding planes?

    I fail to see how whitelisting white people is going to help anything, other than padding the info of CAPPS, and introducing biometrics to the public -wrapping it in a sense of convenience to help the spread of this insecure ID.

    If I held my breath until our government did something *for* me, rather than to or against me, I'd be goddamn Suffocated Smurf.

  • by Landaras ( 159892 ) <neil&wehneman,com> on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @04:04AM (#9558211) Homepage
    I'm a little surprised that no one has mentioned that Israel has been offering a "trusted traveler" program since 1996.

    Regardless of your politics or religion or whatever, you have to admit that there are few countries that have to deal with terrorism on a more daily basis than Israel.

    And it appears that Israel's voluntary program has also been effective on a logistics level. I found this quote via Google, from the page of Sen. Hutchison (R-TX) [senate.gov] referencing a report by the General Accounting Office :

    At Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion Airport, security waiting time has been reduced from approximately one hour to 20 seconds through the use of biometric identifiers.

    The biometric identifiers mentioned are part of the "trusted traveler" program.

    As long as any program such as this is not compulsory, I view it as a useful option.

    - Neil Wehneman
    • by Jah-Wren Ryel ( 80510 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @06:21AM (#9558563)
      Regardless of your politics or religion or whatever, you have to admit that there are few countries that have to deal with terrorism on a more daily basis than Israel.

      And regardless of your politics, you have to admit that there is no country that has been more spectacular at failing to solve their terrorism problems than Israel. For all their logistical ability, Israel is on the top of list of countries that we should avoid emulating when it comes to actually dealing with terrorism.
      • Your reply might have some merit, but it has nothing to do with the case in point, which is stopping a terrorist from boarding a plane and wreaking havoc. Israel has been pretty effective there.
  • by Jah-Wren Ryel ( 80510 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @06:47AM (#9558626)
    So far it seems no one has pointed out the flipside of this "solution" and the social problems that follow. I'm talking about the effect it will have on the people who sign up and use it, instead of worrying about the system's effectiveness at discouraging terrorism (which is an altogether very important risk) I'm talking about its effective on our nation's social structure.

    Without a doubt, some of the earliest users of this system will be the political class. Right now we are suppossed to be subject to random searches (as well as an apparently random no-fly list, but that's another topic). This condition means that potentially anyone, all the way up to the speaker of the house and the senate majority/minority leaders must entertain the possibility of being subjected to random search and all the inconvenience and embarrasment that goes with it.

    There have been countless stories in the news of big famous celebrities and big important rich white politicians being subject to "pointless searches" since everybody knows they aren't terrorists. Well, besides the fact that some of these people are clearly off their rocker to begin with, at least being subjected to a search is equalitarian or in other words, it's "keeping it real," for those who make the rules too.

    Once all the big fat important people effectively opt out of the hassle of searches, only the occasional flyer, the average joe and his poorer cousin, who still make up the majority of passengers, will be subject to the hassle of searches. The people in power will no longer have to live with the consequences of their (assinine and useless) "security" while the rest of us will still bear the brunt of it.

    The next logical step is for "security" measures to be stepped up one little bit at a time because, after all, what politician wants to be seen as "soft on terrorism?" More thorough and invasive searches adding, say, 20 minutes to your wait time -- not a problem on paper since we are all expected to get to the airport 4 hours before departure, so there is plenty of time for extended and more frequent searches (yeah right). Since the very people who will inevitably be tightening the screws on the thumbs of general public will never feel the pressure themselves, it makes it that much easier for them to fuck with us with impunity.

    On the plus side, the database of people in this program is certain to be a high-value target for identity theft. If security on the data is handled by the same people responsible for airport (in)security, then we can look forward to a successful break-in and theft of the database and all the personal information contained therein. Maybe the fallout from such a theft will be enough to get some effective data privacy laws passed in this country. But I'm not holding my breath.
  • Either legally or practically (with the wait being unbearably long otherwise)?
  • And as I walk through the express lane I will turn and show them

    "Fuck all y'all bitch ass niggas!"
  • by putaro ( 235078 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @08:16AM (#9558892) Journal
    The problem with the whole airline security mess is that they are trying to secure a very large area with the goal being to keep out less than 1/1000 of 1% of the people - and that group of people is not known. It simply doesn't make any sense. Military bases and other secure areas work by keep out 99% of the population and those who are allowed in are reasonably well checked. Trying to keep out an unknown .001% is impossible.

    The old system worked reasonably well. During the 9/11 hijackings no guns, bombs, chemical mace, swords, stun guns or other major weapons were used. The security system worked. The failure wasn't in the security system - it was in how the flying populace was trained to react to a hijacking. Five guys with box cutters will not be able to take over an airplane again.

    This new measure will make it easier for frequent flyers to put up with the current nonsense, allowing the TSA to perpetuate itself while offering no real security. There is no way you can keep hijackers off an airplane because YOU DON'T KNOW WHO THEY ARE. We have been successful in keeping them from having any major weapons. That, combined with the new attitude passengers will take towards hijackers are sufficient.

    The next terrorist act in the U.S. will not involve airplanes. That barn door doesn't need any more shutting.
  • Skynet has officially become self-aware.
  • That's why we've had 10 more 9/11 attacks, as you know.

    Terrorists are all-knowing, unstoppable geeks, who can game any system, and GPG their messages in their heads without computer help. ;)

    Um, no. Obviously, any measure can be theoretically defeated, but that doesn't mean not taking measures is a good idea.

  • "carried their biometric identifiers (fingerprint & iris) with them between airports on a smart card"

    I don't get it, if they can't store your biometric data what good is it? Do you scan your real fingerprint and verify that it matches the one one the smart card? Then anyone who holds a card and matches it is cleared? This seems odd.

  • Why bother? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by nursedave ( 634801 )
    The thing I can't understand is, why bother? I've travelled internationally several times since our 'security' was 'heightened,' some from Saudi Arabia even, and I can't tell what it is that this smart card is supposed to do for me. I would hope that certain security measures would be made irregardless of having or not having a card. I've had to go through metal detectors, bomb sniffers, my luggage x-rayed, my passport scanned to ensure it was legit and not stolen, etc.; all things I would hope would hap
  • Think of the things to come from this wonderous technology. I *really* can't wait until I can pay for things by fingering a nearby cash register... er, biometric validation register...

    Sheesh... how long until we start seeing information from this system used against *us* (the NON-terrorists) in court? It's already being done with EZ-Pass and the like. ("Yes, your honor, it was my finger that purchased those condoms...")
    This only makes it worse...

    I think it's time for a one way ticket to Antartica!
  • by Zed2K ( 313037 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @11:34AM (#9560644)
    I don't know what these frequent fliers have packed in their carry on bags that causes them to waste so much time at security. I've been to the nations busiest airports at the worst times (holidays) and have never spent more than 10-15 minutes or so getting through security. I never set off the metal detector therefore I never have to get searched. Its extremely simple:

    1. Empty out your pockets into your carry on bag. Everything! Keys, changes, everything! I usually keep my wallet on me just because only thing in there is paper and plastic.
    2. Stick your boarding pass in your back pocket so nothing is in your hands.
    3. Wear sneakers. If you can't wear sneakers then take your shoes off ahead of time and send them through the machine.
    4. No big metal belt buckles. I see this so often, people are idiots.
    5. Walk through normally, not folding your arms or hands in pockets.
    6. Be polite! This is a biggie! I've seen so many rude frequent fliers and businessmen at security.

    Using these simple steps avoids any metal on you and gets you through security without getting stopped. It takes no time at all to put things in your carry on bag before you leave your home or car. But people are so freaking lazy then they act like the security is singling them out when the real truth is they set off the detector because they are a freaking moron.

Gee, Toto, I don't think we're in Kansas anymore.

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