Airlines Ordered To Turn Over Passenger Data 57
interactive_civilian writes "Wired (among others) is reporting that the Transportation Safety Administration plans 'to order all 72 domestic airlines to turn over the passenger records -- which can include credit card numbers, phone numbers, addresses and health conditions -- in order to stress-test a centralized passenger screening system called "Secure Flight."' They are hoping to reduce the number of "false positives" in the no fly lists. If the information were to be made available, it would be interesting to see how many names that would not have been allowed to fly were allowed to."
It is fitting to say .. (Score:2, Funny)
sorry, had to be said.
Stress-testing?? (Score:2, Interesting)
It sounds more like a test data conversion, or test functional testing to me...?
Re:Stress-testing?? (Score:1)
----
C Language Unit Testing [sourceforge.net]
Re:Big Brother does Airplanes (Score:3, Insightful)
The big difference is that credit-card employees, wearing dark suits and fitted with ear-pieces, won't show up at your door at 3am and drag you off to a holding cell for interrogation for possibly being a terrorist. Errors in your credit history may be a pain, but it's far better than being held without bail or a hearing.
Big Brother does the Airline Industry (Score:2, Interesting)
Big Brother is here, but is this any worse than what we already have? We all may abhor a centralized depository of data run by the government, but can private sector databases truly do better?
Take the credit agencies for instances. Three of them, each only communicating a minor amount of information. Got a problem with your credit? Some possible fraud on your record? Just try getting a, non phone-tree, human representative to speak to you - without having to pony up the $
Re:Big Brother does the Airline Industry (Score:2)
No, I think a government controlled list that decides who can and cannot take an airplane is a Very Bad Idea.
Re:Big Brother does the Airline Industry (Score:1)
Toys? (Score:1)
Safety Data (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Safety Data (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Safety Data (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Safety Data (Score:2)
I'm not disagreeing with the notion that terrorist threats are overblown, but let's not exaggerate here.
Re:Safety Data (Score:5, Insightful)
yes.
Better to give over a few details than to have your plane taken over by terrorists.
Indeed. Please give me your data, and I will protect you. What you don't believe me, a perfect stranger? But you seemed to believe the TSA folks... Aaah, you were lulled by thier shiny badges... I get it, shiny things good.
Re:Safety Data (Score:1)
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary security deserve neither liberty nor security."
--Benjamin Franklin
That settles it.
Re:Safety Data (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, everybody knows that if you don't do anything, you will die. People faced with certain death become very motivated. No hijacking will be able to take place now unless the hijackers have significant numbers compared to the passengers, are very well-armed, and are willing to kill most people on board. That simply isn't going to happen. My best way to stay safe on an airliner is to be on a plane filled with bad motherfuckers who won't be afraid to rush the terrorists when they try to take over. The TSA isn't trying to protect us from hijackings, they're simply trying to expand.
Re:Safety Data (Score:1)
But they are willing and able to do exactly that.. and it only takes one suitably equipped suicide terrorist to do the job.
I don't think they are too concerned that passengers will get frisky and try to stop them.. they will kill any that bother them and then kill the rest after anyway..
If they are able to get on the plane, then its all over no matter what.. best that can be hoped for is that less people are killed on the ground as well.
Re:Safety Data (Score:5, Insightful)
Killing everybody onboard is not the realm of hijacking, so it's not part of the subject being discussed. There are many easier ways to kill everybody on board an airliner than getting a bunch of guys inside it with guns.
I don't think they are too concerned that passengers will get frisky and try to stop them.. they will kill any that bother them and then kill the rest after anyway.
That worked three times. The fourth time it mostly failed. (The airliner crashed, but the airliner's target wasn't hit.) The only reason it was "mostly" is because the passengers didn't find out that the calculus of hijacking has changed until the situation was controlled by the hijackers. Now people will make their move as soon as a hijacking attempt becomes apparent.
If they are able to get on the plane, then its all over no matter what.. best that can be hoped for is that less people are killed on the ground as well.
Do you really think that five guys armed with box cutters are going to be able to kill a plane full of people with nothing to lose? Or two guys armed with guns? It's not going to happen. Notice how many successful hijackings there have been in the last three years. Notice how every time somebody tries something weird, he's tackled by his compatriots and tied up. The hijackers will always be significantly outnumbered, and no weapon you can get through security with any degree of reliability will let you win against those odds, especially against people who are backed into a corner.
Re:Safety Data (Score:2)
Unfortunately, the answer is clearly yes: guy points gun at side of plane and fires, cabin decompresses explosively, plane crashes, and everybody dies. No magic or cunning planning required.
The relevant question must surely be whether facilitating enormous invasion of privacy will actually make this any less likely, by reducing the risk of the
Re:Safety Data (Score:2)
Airline security is a joke: it's just PR to support the government takeover of privacy and other ri
Re:Safety Data (Score:2)
Unfortunately, the answer is clearly yes: guy points gun at side of plane and fires, cabin decompresses explosively, plane crashes, and everybody dies. No magic or cunning planning required.
You are incorrect. Explosive decompression will not kill everybody on board. Look at the case of Aloha Airlines flight 243 [aviation-safety.net]. A structural failure resulted in an
Re:Safety Data (Score:2)
Absolutely. I do not give consent to the US government to track data about me as a non-citizen, and many US laws would currently (and try to) violate privacy laws here in Canada.
I simply will not travel to the US nowadays specifically because the current administrations policy of assuming that I'm a criminal and that my friggin credit card information is an
Re:Safety Data (Score:2)
Re:Safety Data (Score:1)
So at the moment, we are giving up our personal informaiton, but all we are getting is the possibility of more security. There will be no public review as to whether the loss of privacy will *actually* increase security. There will be no conesquences if it doesn't.
Re:Safety Data (Score:1)
You're getting ahead of yourself. Try asking that question after you've already established that the data will actually be used in a competent manner to get useful information.
Re:Safety Data (Score:2)
Seems like this has been ongoing (Score:5, Insightful)
As a personal rights advocate, all I ask for is transparency in the process. The Bush administration has been criticized for it's misleading statements regarding the purpose of it's initiatives... so Bush, just tell us what's going on so we know what to think about it...
Re:Seems like this has been ongoing (Score:2)
Here is the truly insightful comment:
"Most likely this is an Aschcroft legacy project and will be curbed soon by Gonzalez."
I just wanted to test out my hypothesis that any negative or even pseudo-negative comment about Bush would get high marks here o
Re:Seems like this has been ongoing (Score:2)
Re:Seems like this has been ongoing (Score:2)
Transport Security Administration (Score:3, Informative)
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is committed to constantly reviewing screening procedures to ensure our measures are targeted to counter potential threats, and recently changed passenger screening procedures to strengthen our ability to detect explosives at the security checkpoints. One significant enhancement, which has generated discussion and concerns among some passengers, involves more frequent use of pat-down searches, which are to be done in a professional, respectful manner. We take each situation seriously and procedures are in place to address all concerns.
Terrorism is impossible to fight (Score:5, Insightful)
When the allies were unable to attack the germans through convential means they used civilians in occupied europe to launch attacks. Freedom fighters or terrorists? Well they won and the germans lost so freedom fighters they are.
Certain groups feel that they have to wage a war against the goverments to achieve their objectives. This is nothing new and sometimes we are sympatetic and sometimes we are not.
There are however three problems in fighting them. The first is that the terrorists don't obey the same set of rules. Lets face it, baskenland/ireland/palestine terrorists could be easily wiped out if spain/england/israel just used the same methods but on a slightly larger scale. But that ain't allowed. Terrorists have no rules, those that fight them can't afford to have no rules.
Second is that crime may not pay but terrorism certainly does. Just check Arafat. The guy has become filthy rich. Some people here complain about how western goverments are only stuffing their own pockets yet the income of a blair or bush pales to the self enrichment that goes on in palestine.
Ireland has the same problem. On both sides the terrorists have established a very nice power base for themselves with criminals empires that may once have been put up to fund their activities but now give their controllers a very nice income.
But the final problem has become clear time and time again. It is easy to track the ringleaders but impossible to take them out without angering all the bleeding hard liberals. The recruits who commit the actual attacks are unknowns. Check the 9/11 attackers. Check the murderer of Theo van Gogh. Check the people who blow themselves up in Israel and Iraq.
But really check them. They are not just clean as in having no previous terrorist connections. They are clean in that they come from "good" backgrounds. Not the poor, family killed, religious lunatics that people like to imagine.
If anything they are poor little rich kids.
You can't track them. The ring leaders stay outside reach and keep themselves just low profile enough that you can't just send a commando team to kill them. The raw recruits are to clean to show up.
Sure there can be arrests and you can spend billions on tracking them all but the terrorists don't care. They have won. Every second we spend on chasing them they have won. Every second we are afraid they have won. We could arrest 99% of their people and if they only manage 1 feeble attack every few years they will still have won.
It is in many ways like the war of drugs. Unless you are willing to go the way of the soviet union or china then their is no way to fight drugs. Stalin was very succesfull at keeping all the populations in the USSR in line. Slaughter everyone. Dead people don't riot. Then again who needed terrorism in the USSR when the state was so ready to hand it out?
Re:Terrorism is impossible to fight (Score:3, Interesting)
Sorta the old 'butterfly causing a hurricane' effect. Just knock down a building, set back and all the governments will do the rest of the terrorizing for you.
Well at least it's a good time to be a politician. That has to count for something, doesn'
Re:Terrorism is impossible to fight (Score:2)
Um, the last time I checked he was still dead.
terrorists vs freedom fighters (Score:1)
if the hijackings of sept 11th had been on military planes and crashed into military targets (ie..an airforce base), this world would be completely different from how it is now.
Turn 'em over! (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, that's right Delta - Those passenger lists have to be FACE DOWN!
Turn 'em over - NOW!
Re:Turn 'em over! (Score:2)
"Okay, you're approaching the building where the records are kept. When you get there, bank sharply, because the FBI ordered airlines to turn, over passenger data."
sensitivity (Score:2)
Maybe they should be sensitive to the need to preserve everybody's freedom and security, American or not. It's the right thing to do. Even if that doesn't matter to the TSA, tourism figures should and tourists will stop coming if they don't feel welcome.
Re:sensitivity (Score:1)
Aliens?!? (Score:1)
Move along... Nothing to see here.
It's been said before (Score:3, Insightful)
"Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." -Ben Franklin
Limiting freedoms in grotesque ways like this harms America more than any terrorist action ever could. Further, it permits the terrorists to succeed in their mission by admitting that we are going to change the foundational elements of our society simply to accommodate their existence.
Re:It's been said before (Score:1)
While the pricipal point that one should not be giving up essential liberty to get temporary safety is good, I have one ongoing problem with this quote being used over and over.
Who the fuck Franklin thought he was when he decided that he has the right to decide who deserves what?
Re:It's been said before (Score:2)
Re:It's been said before (Score:1)
Regardless of what preceeded the "you deserve..." statement, to say something like that is in essence forcing a value judgement upon another person. That's what makes the second half of Franklin's statement arrogant.
But I guess that's the way the world works these days. If a majority thinks the forceful value judgement, then you are stuck being a minority opinion
Re:It's been said before (Score:1)
You gotta realize that the world is not black and white and even your biggest untouchable hero may have flaws, just like anyone else.
Bush voters... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Airlines to False Negatives: (Score:2)