CAPPS 2 Back to the Drawing Board 191
dagnabit writes "Just saw this over at MSNBC. Apparently Tom Ridge is revising CAPPS II due to the lawsuits and complaints from some Congresscritters As an alternative, the TSA is hoping frequent travellers will voluntarily give up their info..."
build a database you mean... (Score:5, Insightful)
"The Department of Homeland Security and the TSA feel very strongly we should not move forward on any program that in any way infringes on preserving our freedoms," Stone said. "That is first and foremost."
Which really means, "we thought that people would just go along with us because we snuck every other piece of bullshit legislation through without notice but we were wrong."
The system, as originally proposed, would require all passengers to provide extra information when booking a ticket -- information that airlines don't currently ask for, like addresses, phone numbers and dates of birth. The system would then check that information against databases of criminals and terrorists and assign each passenger a green, yellow or red score, according to perceived risk.
Civil-liberties groups from the left and right have gained powerful allies on Capitol Hill by arguing the system is both too invasive and ineffective.
Damn straight it's ineffective. The 9/11 terrorists were already in the country legally. What the hell good would this do? They were already flying planes. Would knowing their dates of birth and their addresses have helped? Nope.
Privacy firebrand Bill Scannell, whose DontSpyOnUs [dontspyonus.com] website has targeted companies such as JetBlue and Delta Airlines for working with the TSA, welcomed news of changes to CAPPS II, but argued the TSA did not go far enough.
"They should shut down this anti-democratic project and put it into a security system that works," Scannell said. "Instead of retooling, they should junk the entire system and improve physical security."
No way! Improve physical security? You mean like stop worrying about having an algorithm figure stuff out and do it manually? That's work, no way! Plus, we wouldn't be able to create a large database of information on airline passengers that could be easily accessed by other agencies in the on-going fight to end freedom, errr I mean terrorism.
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:5, Insightful)
I may be off base here, but weren't a few of them wanted for various warrents [cnn.com]? Such a system could conceivably allow authorities to make an arrest before they get on the plane. It would seem at least that checking passenger ID's against police and FBI wanted lists would make sense...
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:1)
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:3, Insightful)
Correction (Score:2)
I would note that if "papers, please" becomes a regular part of travel in this country, then what makes this country special is dead.
I need to use the preview button more often. Oh, and more coffee, too.
Re:Correction (Score:2)
You as a passenger wouldn't be asked for any further documentation than you already provide - it's just that law enforcement would have an opportunity to apprehend suspects that are trying to travel. In my mind, this wouldn't be u
Re:Correction (Score:3, Interesting)
It used to be that you could sell your ticket if you changed your plans, now you have to try to get a partial refund and the airline can sell a last-minute ticket to someone else at three times the cost. If
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:4, Informative)
Second, Atta had the bench warrant, and was pulled over with a bench warrant, and not arrested.
Third, good grief - everyone with a ticket won't be able to fly? They only write about a gazillion of those things a day.
Finally, since when are airline ticket takers constables? What's next? Your McD's order taker will want your DOB etc so the local cops can come pick you up if you have an unpaid parking ticket?
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
Such a system may well have prevented that, or flagged law enforcement to trail them once they arrived.
Second, Atta had the bench warrant, and was pulled over with a bench warrant, and not arrested.
Checking passenger ID's against warrant lists would allow them to make such an arrest. The reason he got away before is that the officer wasn't aware of the warrant.
Third, good grief - everyone with a ticket won't b
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:4, Insightful)
It's ok. It's a fallicy that in this age is excusable--after all, nobody wants to be responsible for anything so we have insurance and judicial champions to assauge our sorrows and beat the snot out of the other guy, and since he lost he's responsible.
As for the "system" thing...
Unfortunately anyone who has ever caught the attention of a policeman
(I'm a white-boy eating lunch in a park in a predominantly hispanic/black neighborhood or I'm riding a bicycle with a bandanna on my head or I'm wearing mostly black clothes and walking home across a strip-mall parking-lot) knows exactly how troublesome and useless a security person can be. People have misconceptions, preconceptions, and people with power (police, judges) are often arbitrary with how and why they employ it. B.F. Skinner had a great deal of important things to say about systems and how they influence behavior.
Police and the system do not prevent crimes,they react to them.
A system which catalogs people and manages movement control only controls the willing. It's possible for a single individual to carry out acts of horror and go unnoticed. A small group of justified individuals, even more so. And a organization of people infused with righteous determination and resources can undo hundreds of years of effort in a presidential term.
People who use the system to control other people justify their actions and the existence of the system in what is often a self-feeding, self-fulfilling prophecy. When you're "marked", you're no longer free. Once you're no longer free, you justify the system. "Sure it's not perfect but it's necessary" sucks.
Nothing can prevent crimes without removing (en-masse) the free will of people.
Nothing can prevent people from doing something which is going to kill, and maim.
Citizens should try to prevent people from being cataloged. I believe Nazi Germany in the early part of the twentieth century gave us a great example of how that power can be abused. By proxy we already have a "mark of the beast" through the SSN and a trail of records, womb to tomb, in order to feed the government.
As a people who value freedom U.S. citizens are strangely as willing as dray animals to be used in a variety of confusing and profitable ways. Maybe there's something to be said about homeschooling and turning that around. Is a good citizen someone who isn't necessarily "patriotic" as defined by the handlers in power? Maybe being patriotic or a good citizen means taking a longer, non-partisan, more suspicious view of mind and movement control.
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:3, Insightful)
What I'm talking about here isn't an end-all be-all cure for all crime. It's a simple, common-sense idea - when you fly, you already present your ID to verify that you are the person to whom the ticket has been issued. Simply bounce that ID against a consolidated watch list and notify law enforcement when a match is made.
If you're on the list, they're already after you. Get over it. All I'm saying is that we should take existing information a
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
In this world, it just makes for good reading and the occasional TV show, and maybe a movie (or a Bollywood classic complete with handfuls of dye-powder cast into the air as Tom Ridge dances across a table laden with fruit and the skulls of terrorists while an out-of-tune guitar twangs to the syncopated beat of whips across the backs of the new jobless underclass, soon to wear TSA togs--let the vetting begin!).
Alpha-rats are never
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
Only 1 had a warrant, out of 18. Think that would have stopped anything? But, that aside, how many warrants exist for parking tickets, which very well could have blown away? Are all such people to be arres
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
Yes, it could. One is more than zero.
that aside, how many warrants exist for parking tickets,...
Are all such people to be arrested because they have a business trip to go on for...
Finally, there's a thing about jurisdictions.
I hear you. You'd rather have your government handcuffed then have it offer better protection to citizens (i.e. fulfill it's role).
do you hold with the police state = good thing?
Strawman a
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
> > then have it offer better protection to citizens (i.e. fulfill it's role).
> I'd rather have my government concentrate on important things
> than enforcing local parking ticket warrants
Al Capone didn't want the government concentrating on his tax return either. The government enforces the law - full stop. If you find a law repressive, work towards it's legislative removal. Don't expect police to check their brains by the do
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
Al Capone didn't want the government concentrating on his tax return either. The government enforces the law - full stop. If you find a law repressive, work towards it's legislative removal. Don't expect police to check their brains by the door when they need to investigate someone.
He didn't want the IRS to investigate him, which is part of its charter, btw. They didn't have the airline ticket counter person forcing a check of his tax return when he's trying to fly somewhere. There's a slight differenc
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
> > > > Only 1 had a warrant, out of 18. Think that would have stopped anything?
> > > Yes, it could. One is more than zero.
> You completely ignored this point - conceding to the truth only helps.
Massoui.
From here: [cnn.com]
Hijacker Mohamed Atta was stopped by police last July in Tamarac, Fla., and ticketed for an invalid license, officials there have said. He ignored the ticket and a bench warrant was issued for his arrest. But, when he was stopped for speeding a few weeks later i
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:3, Funny)
Also from the article:
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:3, Insightful)
No way! Improve physical security? You mean like stop worrying about having an algorithm figure stuff out and do it manually? That's work, no way! Plus, we wouldn't be able to create a large database of information on airline passengers that could be easily accessed by other agencies in the on-going fight t
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:5, Insightful)
Work [bbc.co.uk].
Any system that decides to ignore people who don't fit its narrow world view is a FAILURE. If nobody cared about the guy with the british passport, would the flight have been saved? Would the arrests in Texas have been made if all the agents were out tailing Pakistanis or Iraqis?
As for CAPPS II, it had a whole host of problems rather than just collecting public data into a single place. Color coding was designed to be loose so that the person could move you up if you "looked" suspicious, or asked questions (in fact, IIRC, asking questions automatically escalated you). The database was not available for review or correction (the fact that our government insists on using bad data scares me more than anything else. But then again the whole Iraq mess proves that our government thrives on error). The list only goes on from there. That underpaid screener who just got laid off? They took your entire identity with them, and now have themselves a "raise". No auditing of usage of the data is almost as bad as the lack of review of the data.
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:4, Insightful)
So every Middle-Eastern LOOKING male should be profiled? Of what country? What about Americans?
Letme guess you aren't of Middle-Eastern descent? Must be easy then, to come up with that profiling scheme.
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
Wrong. While you're profiling Middle Eastern males, the threat is already evolving. The Palestineans have sent many women suicide bombers to Israel. Richard Reid? He was British.
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
I doubt harrassing a minority (mid-east descent?) is going to earn any civil rights points.
The age 12 thing is too high. There was a kid that was conned into bringing a teddybear with a gun inside it through security. Women have been found with guns and knives too.
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:3, Insightful)
I think that's the wrong goal. It should be about keeping weapons off planes, not terrorists. Personally, I don't care of Osama himself is sitting in coach, if we can be assured that there are no weapons or explosives available on the flight. That should be the goal of airport security. Finding terrorists and building a criminal case against them is th
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
Yeah, sure, keeping weapons off planes certainly helped. Guns haven't been allowed on airplanes for decades - sure glad that policy helped stop a couple of terrorists from taking over four planes on 9/11.
Seriously, the system we have in place now is the same as the one that was in place on 9/10, just more of it and more intrusive. It didn't work on 9/11, and the thinking that more of it will work better is simply insane. The system we have
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
You want secure flights? Secure the cockpit door, and then let everybody with a concealed weapon permit carry on the flight.
Law enforcement will NEVER be able to bring us security from ANYTHING. It's not even their job.
And no amount of screening you do will ever keep all weapons off a flight. Somebody can always get through security.
If you just encourage people to carry legally on the flight, you've just made it virtually impossible for the flight to be hijacked. Just
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:3, Insightful)
That's easy. The highest probability of catching a terrorist, etc., is to perform random searches. Any system that puts individuals under greater scrutiny and they can become aware of it (such as them being searched more thoroughly or more often than an average passenger) is less likely to catch terrorists. (This is the characteristic demonstrated by the Carnival Booth algorithm [mit.edu]. The reason for this is because you can figure ou
Re:build a database you mean... (Score:2)
So a system designed to make flying supposedly more secure would end up making it less secure and tip off terrorists that the are being watched and should be more careful. Way to go!
Revising CAPPS 2 (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Revising CAPPS 2 (Score:2)
Re:Revising CAPPS 2 (Score:2)
Ridge said a new program with a different name might be developed to replace CAPPS II. It could be replaced by a new "registered traveler" program if enough people volunteer to provide personal information, the report said.
It's just like the grocery store card, well, you know, milk would be 30 cents cheaper
Re:Revising CAPPS 2 (Score:2)
[attendant taking papers]"Date of birth and current address, please."
[traveler]"Forget it. I already bought my ticket for this flight."
[attendant, whispered to security guard]"Grab that one for questioning."
Re:Revising CAPPS 2 (Score:2)
Steak through the *head*? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Steak through the *head*? (Score:4, Funny)
Not me anyway. I put steak through my head all the time. The baked potatoes and veg I also put through it may reduce the danger though.
Persistent data? (Score:5, Interesting)
I've travelled and been green lighted by CAPPS I.
So CAPPS II is dead...but is my information still...
Re:My Guess... (Score:2)
The program will be reincarnated with new spin and a new name- much like what happened with TIA.
Re:Persistent data? (Score:2)
The database is probably mirrored to another system - and eventually backed up for analysis purposes on a less volatile medium - stored away in some black vault under the NSA building in Ft Meade Md., after having been used to suppliment their existing data warehouses.
Oh, you can be sure they have it somewhere.
Why would they cancel... (Score:3, Funny)
At least they are thinking (Score:4, Insightful)
Dumb? (Score:5, Insightful)
"Roger, this passenger has taken 2000 flights in the last 10 years...you know...I have this suspicion he is UP TO SOMETHING!"
Re:Dumb? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Dumb? (Score:2, Insightful)
They all end up being treated the same, whether that be well or poorly and you could make 6 months at Guantanamo a prerequitie for getting on a puddle jumper and it wouldn't do anything to prevent terrorism, but would destroy any number of innocent lives.
KFG
Re:Dumb? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Dumb? (Score:2)
So someone could take 2000 flights and only attack on the 2001st flight.
New name (Score:1, Offtopic)
Live data? (Score:5, Insightful)
From the article:
Airlines, some facing lawsuits, have been caught up in the controversy because they provided passenger information for use in testing the screening system.
Has no one there heard of 'dummy data'? Live data - particularly sensitive data - is a no-no in the testing environment. In many cases this is simply because the developers have absolutely no need-to-know; in other instances it is possible for live data to escape the test environment via generated reports, bug reports (e.g. SSNs ending in 4 cause $PROBLEM), etc.
You can't do that... (Score:2)
This is also *WHY* we all have to sign
why frequent flyers? (Score:4, Insightful)
Non US Persons (Score:2)
If they collected it for all non US persons I wouldn't mind. Although don't they already collect all this info for non US persons. If not, maybe they should.
Re:Non US Persons (Score:2)
Please. This is a slippery slope -- foreigners already are photographed and forced to submit fingerprints on entering US. There is no security reason not to impose the same upon citizens -- only the political one -- the voting public's opposition.
Re:Non US Persons (Score:2)
Anyway, I have a problem with the mandatory fingerprinting. I think, it is offensive.
Re:Non US Persons (Score:2, Insightful)
If they collected it for all non US persons I wouldn't mind. Although don't they already collect all this info for non US persons. If not, maybe they should.
Re:Non US Persons (Score:3, Insightful)
I hope your governments will protect your privacy, but I don't care if mine does in order to protect me - I care if they break *my* privacy, but not that of a non-citizen. I assume most of the world is the same way - I certainly don't hear a whole lot of French people complaining about the well-documented practice of French airlines assisting French corporations in industrial espionage.
And now for the inevitable frog-bashing (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not new here, I should not be surprised. Everytime there's a political discussion, some neo-con starts bashing the French for the most unlikely reason.
I thought I had seen it all. According to our well-documented accusers, we sold weapons to Saddam during the embargo, we sold him nuclear weapons, we stole Iraq oil, we're antisemi
Re:And now for the inevitable frog-bashing (Score:2)
Business travelers talk business in the air. There have been a lot of cases of
Background check (Score:1)
Re:Background check (Score:2)
Conspiracy Theory (Score:3, Insightful)
European data exchange? (Score:5, Insightful)
There does seem to be a fallacy going around in intelligence circles that all that is required for good security is as much data as can possibly be obtained - which of course isn't the case. What is required is good and timely analysis of relevant good quality data. Airlines can't even book seats correctly 100% of the time - what are the chances that their data is going to be good quality 100% of the time?
Re:European data exchange? (Score:3, Interesting)
Remember? (Score:5, Insightful)
We will not allow these terrorists to change our way of life.
heh. right.
Re:Remember? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Remember? (Score:2)
Exactly. Why allow terrorists to change our way of life when Congress gets paid to do it? Get those lazy legislators off their asses - they're on the public payroll and they've got work to do!
voluntary system (Score:5, Interesting)
Voluntarily, yeah right. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Voluntarily, yeah right. (Score:2)
Re:Voluntarily, yeah right. (Score:2)
Voluntary program? (Score:2)
Of course, if you don't volunteer the information, they'll be happy to conduct you to a private room for your strip search.
Punctuation...? (Score:2)
The program, which has never been tested fully, was launched after the Sept. 11, 2001, hijacking attacks to refine electronic techniques for using personal information to identify and rate potential threats.
This sentence means that the program hijacked attacks [...]. I think they meant:
The program, which has never been tested fully, was launched after the Sept. 11, 2001 hijacking attacks to refine electronic technique
Not because of good intentions.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Its because they realized when senators and congressman and lobbyists on either side of the spectrum told them that snooping on influential people aint a good thing. Its not me or you they are worried about offending, its the people who they need, who can make or break them that they cater to.
But they would violate the rights of every non-american who step off or on their planes with out a second thought, because every immigrant is a potential terrorist, isnt it? Every tanned face will be pulled aside, strip searched, his financial / public and private records scoured and reviewed by people who could very well abuse that power.
Well..here's to Good Ol America.
Re:Not because of good intentions.. (Score:2)
As a "slightly" out of shape man with nerdy glasses and a skin color that has the same pigmentation as a snowball, I think that myself and much of slashdot should have no problems with these "stereotypical terrorist" regulations.
I've heard about the slow and invasive processes (e.g. drinking your own breast milk as in Fahrenheit 9/11) but I
Government Nonsense (Score:1, Insightful)
The few good CAPPS ideas (Score:2)
What is needed is a far better infiltration of the terrorist networks. Then disseminate the characteristics to the security agencies. Not a quick fix, but nothing can be a silver bullet (absolute security infringes on liberty, absolute liberty infringes on security
As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm a native born, US citizen, of (obvious) northern European ancestory. I have 2 degrees, an honorable discharge and have filed a tax return every year since I was 15 (that's 19 years if you're counting). I held a secret clearance for several years and have been bonded several times. I've had a couple speeding tickets, but never even been accused of any other misdemeanor, let alone a felony. In other words, my life has been documented by our government in quite substantial detail.
Despite this, every time I fly in the continental US I get searched. At the security screen where everybody else is passed through the x-ray and detector, my shoes are removed, I'm patted down, my hands and shoes are swabbed for explosive residue and my bags are rifled through. When I get to the gate and hand my ticket over, I get hauled off to the side, patted down again, and my bags re-searched. Every plane change, every pass through a gate or security station brings the same result. I have not boarded a flight in the US in the last 3 years without this happening. There is no appeal, there is no questioning why, there is only the choice to submit to this or not fly. My crime? Well, the only event I can come up with is I declared a firearm in my luggage after 9/11. A perfectly legal thing, I followed all the rules - demonstrated it was clear, locked the case, and placed it in the suitcase with the "steal me" tag.
It's embarassing, being dragged off to stand in the "special line" by myself. Mainly, I wonder what lowlife is getting through while they interogate me? Security personel are a finite resource, people have to be moved through at a reasonable clip or else flights are missed. When they spend 15 minutes with me, that's 15 minutes they could be investigating someone with bad intentions. Mistakes on credit reports can be researched, documented and appealed, usually successfully. This is unappealable, hell, nobody will even admit I've been flagged, it's "random".
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
Well let's see what government DB's I'd be entered in. They're both from state run universities. In both cases I had to apply for federal and state financial aid which involved cross checking with the various income tax entities. I was on the GI bill for the first, that's cross referenced to the DOD. Shall I go on?
My point is that my life has been thoroughly and completly documented by the state and federal governments. I have entrie
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
Listen to me, it's every time. Every time, without fail, that I board a plane in the US I get the routine. No If's, ands or buts. If I was next to Bin Laden himself, I'd get hauled off and searched. No debate, no question, no explanation, I fly through an airport, I go to the front of the line...
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
May I suggest this solution [johnkerryi...anyway.com]?
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
Remember people claiming there was no difference between Bush and Gore? Well, I don't see that this time, rather this is separate but equal evil. Why willingly trade giving up rights a,b, and c for giving up x, y, and z?
Personally, I can't stomach voting for either of them and will probably throw my vote in for Badnarik [badnarik.org]. Yes, I know he has exactly a zero percent chance of winning. Yes, I know it's "throwing my vote away" and "helping Bush." Either way, no matter who wins,
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
Well, at least now we know why you're tagged for search :)
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
Kerry isn't perfect (though you must be really paranoid if you think he can be as bad as Dubya), but even if he is just as bad as Bush it is still better to have him in the White House for the next 4 years than allowing the present idiot to consolidate his position any further. Government should have lots of checks and balances. At the moment everything is controlled by one party, so a lot of those checks have disapeared.
Ideally Kerry wins and spends four years doing nothing but
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
I don't know, I think with Bush we'll lose reproductive rights, with Kerry it'll be gun rights. Bush will bankrupt us with military spending, Kerry with healthcare and welfare. Bush will try to wreck the economy with corporate welfare, Kerry with protectionism. I see a difference, but yeah, I think one is as bad as the other.
Ideally Kerry wins and spends four years doing nothing but fighting with the Republi
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
We can only hope...
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
That's my next step. I'm looking for a new job now and "No Travel" is the big requirement. I figure if I can't drive there, it ain't worth seeing - pretty easy since I'm moving back to the middle of the country, even the coasts are only 3 days away by car or motorcycle.
Re:As someone who was flagged in CAPPS I... (Score:2)
I've been debating about that, even a suit just to get the records opened. I'm a little concerned about getting "doesn't play well with others" and "suspected terrorist" added to my permanent record, I kind of like being gainfully employed... Otoh, keeping anonymous just perpetuates it and if they're fscking me, they're fscking others as well... I've been working up the nerve to post it here for months, even semi-anonymously
Its all a power grab (Score:5, Interesting)
Lets face facts:
1. The 911 flights were brought down with box knives that did not go through security at all.
2. A box knife is no longer an effective way to hijack a plane. This is simply because a hijacked plane is no longer about a 3 day trip to Cuba. Now its about becomming a lawn dart. If you tried to hijack a plane prior to 911 with a knife, maybe we'd sit back and enjoy some cigars when we landed. Today, this firefighter and dozens of other people on the plane are going to shove the box cutter up your ass sideways. I'm not a kung-fu master by any means, but I am a 200 pound man in pretty good shape. Its a narrow plane. If I come running down the isle at you, you are going to fall down. I may get cut with a box cutter. So be it.
Now, making me wait 3 hours in line so you can take my nail clippers away isn't going to change anything at all. There are LOTS of ways we could still take stuff on planes (and if I can think of them, so can anyone else -- but I'd rather not broadcast them).
Tom Ridge and his ilk like to keep people scared because they get more power and funding that way. One way to keep people scared is to make them stand like cattle in long lines to give up deadly nail clippers.
Here's an idea, lets not vote for this administration this time either!
Forget the Privacy Issues .. (Score:4, Informative)
Check out the Carnival Booth [mit.edu] paper put out by MIT. It is long and technical, but well worth the read. I would much rather go back to the private security agencies instead of this bullshit TSA no-hs-education-required-we-dont-do-background-ch
Change? (Score:2)
Consider, a person whose information is quietly taken and then misused (e.g., credit card fraud). Person discovers and sues airline. Airline claims no liability due to Government regulation/law. Person
Re:Change? (Score:2)
One of the big problems that I've always had with CAPPS marks I & II is not "invasion of privacy." My privacy gets invaded to some extent every time the phone rings. I invite a potential invasion of privacy with every business card I hand out. But both of those are reasonably controlled instances. It's simply impossible to live in a vacuum, no matter how hard you try. However, you, as an individual, do and s
New improved (Score:3, Funny)
One idea though - why not add one of those little "Are you a terrorist?" tick-boxes when you buy tickets? I think if they also asked you the same question at the gate they could check to see if you had changed your choice - which would mean you were probably not telling the truth.
Some great ideas here. Oh BTW If they do start doing all that bank account checking stuff and they discover lots of money going between Saudi-Arabia and certain people in the US, they might want to make an exception if the person in question is the owner of any oil companies or their name begins with "prince" because obviously they're not terrorists! that would be abit embaressing, especially if Bush got pulled over trying to get on Air Force 1!
one of the ways CAPPS was supposed to work... (Score:3, Interesting)
There were, as you can imagine, an insane number of troubles and issues with this approach. And our office was one of the ones that screamed bloody murder over these issues.
Re:one of the ways CAPPS was supposed to work... (Score:2)
Poor design and no testing - booyah! (Score:2)
Wait let me guess, the problem with the system is that it didn't spit back a list of names the administration already wanted it to spit back. Guess they'll have to fire the new Intelligence Chief cuz as we all know, the WH never lies.
Security, El Al style (Score:2, Interesting)
Here's an informative article [businessweek.com] from Business Week about a year ago.
The point is that effective and efficient security can be achieved, and it doesn't require this sort of extreme federal legislation. I think that if US carriers and airports look to the example set by El Al, air travel would be much safer.
I liked the part where Steve McQueen. . . (Score:2)
I always wondered what would have happened if he'd made that second jump into Switzerland and freedom. .
Anyway, don't worry about Tom Ridge. Despite delays, he'll have the American infernal security machine up and running like a big pig-processing plant before WWIII hits American shores. Unless you all do something about it first. .
Otherwise, it's "Heil Bush!" (Or Kerry, or whothefuckever happens to be residing after the big November event.)
I think I'm going to spl
are these people really clueless? (Score:2)
Guess what?
You will find them by the score.
You are attempting to identify an extremely rare occurence - maybe 1 person in a billion boards a plane with the intent to highjack it - the false positives will always dominate the results. The cops will be chasing shadows, detaining and searching the wrong people.
Spend the money on real security, such as security guard training (and better pay.)