U.S. Government Wants June Passenger Records 80
danwiz was one of several readers to point out the Associated Press story (carried here by the Boston Globe) which says that that the Transportation Security Administration plans to issue an emergency order requiring that U.S. airlines turn over passenger data for all June 2004 flights to the government within 40 days. "Such data may include credit card numbers, address, telephone number and meal request. Perhaps unrelated to terrorism, the data will be also tested to see if fraud or identity theft can be detected."
Comment period (Score:4, Insightful)
Who am I kidding?
Re:Comment period (Score:1)
"I object to us closing the doors on the barn after the house got out"
Re:Comment period (Score:3, Funny)
Guess that's the end of liberty, for the illusion of temporary safety...
Re:Comment period (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Comment period (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Comment period (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Comment period (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Comment period (Score:1)
Too bad most consumers are just sheep at can't relax enough to just drive. Or, too lazy and too spineless to just say no to airlines.
I am sure, though, that bush has done LITTLE to deserve credit for our not being attacked since 9/11. The attackers are just waiting for a good, long lull and the attendent lapses in security, all the while collecting and analyzing patterns, details, and opportunities information.
I am sure that if they attack from freeways and bicycle
Re:Comment period (Score:2)
Conspiracy (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Conspiracy (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Conspiracy (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Conspiracy (Score:2)
Looks like I need to spend a few years building up an immunity to iocane powder [ucdavis.edu]
Conspiracy -- FBI/CIA-backed ticket sales offices? (Score:1)
That means that despite laws forbidding or not existing to allow them search and seizure powers for LAW ENFORCEMENT purposes, they could collect and analyze information on a business level.
After all,
Re:Conspiracy (Score:2)
Keeping you on your toes (Score:5, Insightful)
Gee, we need a distraction! Let's remind the voters that they need to be scared. A terrorist might kill you and you child at any minute! Only Bush can save you!
Re:Keeping you on your toes (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Keeping you on your toes (Score:1)
I have lived abroad and been hated because of my nationality, and no other reason. I understand that these people have no respect for life or anyone elses right to even exist.
So call if fear mongering if you will. If you want to live in fear go ahead. I understand the threat but don't live in fear. Being afraid of a threat only make
Re:Keeping you on your toes (Score:2, Insightful)
When I was in the Navy, and topics about stupid or corrupt presidents came up, the Chiefs would scowl, "It's not the MAN you're defending and suppor
Re:so how long untill I become a criminal? (Score:2)
Re:so how long untill I become a criminal? (Score:2, Funny)
1. You're using Firefox
2. You had two tabs open
3. With two YRO stories
4. You replied to the wrong one.
5. You want this one [slashdot.org].
6. Someone will shortly claim your soon-to-be reposted comment is a dupe and point to the one in this story as proof.
7. You will lose more karma.
Therefore:
*Don't post while drunk.*
You're right... (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, they couldn't possibly arrest you as an "enemy of the state" just because you violated the Patriot Act/DMCA and were considered pseudo-potentially-suspicious by NSA, CIA, or FBI.
However, now that the "MCP^H^H^H Department of Homeland Security" is in place in conjunction with the "Transportation Saftey Administration", you can rest assured that travel information for June (and the months following) will ONLY be used for your protection.
Now move along Citizen...
... or our Gubment will open a can of "whatever-we-want-in-a-military-tribunal-exempt-o
(I have karma to burn, so if you think I'm trolling - bring it on... If there's ever been anything worth burning karma for in my lifetime, it's the future of the USA and the world in general. Even if you don't agree with my points, you owe it to yourself as a fellow intellectual to make the right decision in November [if you are or know a US Citizen] - VOTE!
Re:You're right... (Score:2)
Re:You're right... (Score:2)
You poor bastard.... They'll probably conclude that you're Muslim, then... and that's way, way worse [www.cbc.ca] .
Re:You're right... (Score:2)
Don't worry. I'll vote early... and often!
Interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
One more database falls to the federal government.
I can't wait until the first person prosecuted or watch-listed because of something he said over an instant-messaging program ("God, Bush is an idiot -- I wish someone would shoot him".) Still no GPG encryption on IM clients (well, other than gabber).
Used to be that you could have an anonymous website, but that's about to go away.
You can't drive without a license (where you get thumbprinted).
You can't fly without all sorts of data about you being logged.
The US government is pushing hard for biometrics in all areas. Biometrics are *terrible* as a traditional authentication system mechanism, since once someone's stolen the secret data (say, hacked one iris reader), you can never invalidate it. However, they're wonderful for monitoring purposes, since people have their "papers" with them wherever they go. They can also be used to tie together databases nicely.
Authoritarianism allowed by the application of computers will be one of the greatest new world problems that we'll have to face. Never before have societies had the ability to crack down, monitor, and ensure precisely compliant behavior on such a large chunk of their population. Can humans function well in such an environment? Is such an environment a good idea?
IM client encryption interoperation (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm up to two states now where I've never been thumbprinted to get a license. (Minnesota and Illinois, and Illinois was only a month ago.) The most identifying data I had to give was my SSN.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
I *was* fully fingerprinted (i.e. not just thumb) by the local police department when I was a child as part of some elementary school-related function. I remember objecting, even at that age, and being told that it was "in case I was ever kidnapped." I was kind of dubious, and tried smudging them.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
If it was like anything around here, you get fingerprinted, and they hand the fingerprint card to your parents in case you're kidnapped. The police don't want a bunch of toddler prints lying around.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Why not? Your prints don't change shape. You just slap them in a police database. And while I was a kid, I certainly wasn't a toddler.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Your prints don't change shape.
Yes they do, somewhat. While the formations don't really change, there is some stretching and "distortion" that accompanies the growth. Matching child prints against the prints of the same person as an adult is difficult and not very reliable, even by human experts -- who are three to five orders of magnitude better at it than the best automated matchers.
Plus, if you ask your parents, I'll bet they remember getting the card with your prints on it. They may still have i
Re:PGP Chat client (Score:2)
Re:"Used to...could have an anonymous website" (Score:2)
Please elaborate.
How exactly did it use to be?
What changed, and when?
Thanks.
Re:Interesting (Score:4, Insightful)
I think it's time we realize--what the U.S. government knows is a superset of what any American corporation knows. If you give any information to any corporation at all, you should just expect the government can get their grubby hands on it at will. There is no law requiring a corporation to withold information requested by the government--or even to tell customers such information has been requested--even if the government has no right to compel such a revelation.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
When they are "questionably" elected officials - HELL YES.
Our elected officials are our last line of defense against corporate rule. Do you really think Walmart would "let" you take 2 weeks of vacation out of the kindness of their heart if they didn't "have to"? There are a tremendous amount of programs in place that we take for granted e
Re:Interesting (Score:1)
Re:Interesting (Score:1)
A majority of the electorate (although not, arguably, the electoral college) voted against Bush - he was appointed to the Presidency anyway
What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:2)
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:2, Insightful)
The hard part is that we have not the technology to distinguish people who hold a si
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:2)
Eloquently said. I don't think that many realize that (or want to realize that). They've been fighting this war for more than 20 years, but the West hast chosen to ignore it. That has stopped and we're still trying to figure out the best way to attack our enemies without harming innocents, whi
What's a little profiling among friend and enemy? (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, excuse the living hell out of ME.
If we learned, then why did we NOT follow the Israeli model, where agents capable of putting a bullet between your eyes in 3.4 seconds, and place agents on planes. Fly them ON DUTY. Fly cops coast to coast. The government can afford it by using funny money to get the tickets, let the airlines post the cash in the bank, and then the DOTreas at the end of the day retreives destroys or recirculates the genuine but tightly-controlled bills.
Re:What's a little profiling among friend and enem (Score:1)
America is not perfect. America has made mistakes. America does make mistakes. America will make some mistakes. That is one of the downfalls of humanity - we make mistakes. What makes us different is from countries such as Russia is that we do learn from our own mistakes. America used the atom bombs in Japan to bring the war in the Pacific to a swift close. The American scientists at the time did not fully understand the full scope of the weapon that
Re:What's a little profiling among friend and enem (Score:1)
~UP
Re:What's a little profiling among friend and enem (Score:1)
No apology is necessary, UP. I enjoy an engaging conversation, and I value free speech.
As for being unclear and offensive... The purpose of the title to my original post was to grab readers' attentions and to spark debate. It succeeded in that in and of itself. However, in giving it such a title I failed to express effectively what I was trying to communicate - hence the trolling rating.
My apologies to you and to all who have taken offense.
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:4, Insightful)
Those that don't learn the mistakes of history are condemned to repeat them.
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:3, Insightful)
Terrified, I asked my father: "Dad, how come these people didn't leave Germany when they still could ?" He answered: "A lot did, but most wanted to stay near their family and didn't think it would become that bad."
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:1)
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:5, Informative)
Simple, that the true baddies will avoid to fall into this profile. Since more attention is directed towards those folks of which the computer believes fall into the category of baddies, less attention is dialed out to those that don't fall into this category and this will be exploited.
Read about the Carnival Booth Algorithm [mit.edu] for more information.
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:2)
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:2)
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:1)
Why all the special treatment for airlines? You won't find security that way, all that does is make anything not defined as "airline security related" less secure.
I don't suppose you'd care to post a cite or something to back up this claim? How many air
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:1)
However, most people in that group are NOT terrorists. If they were mostly white males, would you hold the same view? I doubt it, especially after you would be put through the extra screening.
Some passengers may be inconvenienced
have you been searched? Its more then inconvenienced, you feel violated afterwards. I really hope that y
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:2)
Re:What's a little profiling among friends? (Score:2)
so why not use records from september, 2001? (Score:2)
not have Data Protection in legislation (Score:2)
Maybe about time someone with a clue started banging on about all this at Capitol Hill.
Mind you with November creeping up I doubt they'd get much airspace..
An alternate approach (Score:2)
Better yet, what if everybody emailed them everything? For every trip? Would a DDoS work?
Sometimes it's better to take the opposite approach. If someone closes a road with a gate and a padlock - don't knock it down, put an extra lock on it. Or two.
Alan.
Re:An alternate approach (Score:2)
The point which everyone's missing (Score:4, Interesting)
I've stopped using all public transport which requires ID, if it also means the potential for data retention or a database search (versus mere inspection of your ID).
All these comments about security versus privacy miss an important point:
strictly speaking, security does NOT require that ANY privacy be sacrificed.
There are alternatives.
Even tin-foil-hat (Ultimate Paranoid) I would be willing to submit to personal searches before boarding -- as exhaustive as needed to ensure that I present no risk -- IF it meant that I didn't have to PERMANENTLY risk any privacy/anonymity by making any info about myself available for recording, etc.
I'd gladly trade momentary personal "dignity", and additional costs and delays, to retain my long-term privacy.
All these "terrorism"-related measures aren't just about security. They're also about the inexorable tendency of large regulatory institutions to become impersonal and concomitantly unconcerned about individual rights, an observation which is part of the bedrock rationale for "anarchists".
Particularly in the case of law-enforcement, people in those institutions drool at the prospect of having an excuse to collect exhaustive data about the entire populace, for reasons and purposes far beyond the prevention of terrorism.
Give the Govt What It Needs (Score:1, Troll)
Arguably the government can use the data to do a better job of investigating and preventing terrorism.
And so it should.
But, the current policies are being driven forward with that single-minded objective with no consideration whatsoever given to the preservation of the rights and liberties that have made America a desirable place to be a citizen.
Sure we can defeat terrorism - but who wants to live in a police state?
The government should institute the recommendation of the 9/11 commission [nytimes.com] to create a tr
Re:Give the Govt What It Needs (Score:2)
Or, indeed, the rest of the world.
Current US policies basically say any non-citizens must expect to provide a lung for comparison purposes and expect to be subject to all sorts of stuff. The US government reserves the right to export you to a third country despite your actual cu
Re:Give the Govt What It Needs (Score:2)
If any other country were to impose such invasive measures on visiting US citizens, the howls of outrage that anyone should dare to fingerprint Americans
You mean, like Brasil? [cnn.com]:)
Already started to creep. (Score:4, Interesting)
And in a few years, you'll be denied boarding and arrested after a swipe of your national ID reveals that you have some unpaid parking tickets in Peoria or you're a little behind on your child support payments.
Who else remembers being told about the horrors of Soviet Russia in elementary school, one of which being the internal passport and lack of freedom to travel? Guess what, kids--it's here.
overload (Score:1)