


What the DHS Knows About You 402
Sherri Davidoff writes "Here's a real copy of an American citizen's DHS Travel Record, retrieved from the US Customs and Border Patrol's Automated Targeting System and obtained through a FOIA/Privacy Act request. The document reveals that the DHS is storing: the traveler's credit card number and expiration; IP addresses used to make Web travel reservations; hotel information and itinerary; full airline itinerary including flight numbers and seat numbers; phone numbers including business, home, and cell; and every frequent flyer and hotel number associated with the traveler, even ones not used for the specific reservation."
What??? (Score:5, Funny)
Every time I do that I wonder... (Score:5, Funny)
What if Richard Reid had been the Underwear Bomber instead of the show Bomber?
Re:Every time I do that I wonder... (Score:5, Funny)
What if Richard Reid had been the Underwear Bomber instead of the show Bomber?
Airports in California would be very popular...Airports in New Jersey, not so much.
Re:Every time I do that I wonder... (Score:5, Interesting)
In Atlanta, Ga I was pulled out of the line for an airport security, threatened and subjected to scrutiny which can only be characterized as "harassment"... for making this exact comment.
Re:Every time I do that I wonder... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Every time I do that I wonder... (Score:5, Interesting)
Last time I was in India (Oct of 2001), they were using a standard metal detector with a two stair step in the center that raised you up enough to check your feet without requiring you to remove your shoes. Its probably too simple a solution for the U.S. though.
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It's always seemed strange to me that when people think of the shoe bomber, they think of Richard Reid instead of the guy that actually succeeded. [wikipedia.org]
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Who said anything about "KY"? This is America - we don't play nice.
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Reminds me... (Score:5, Interesting)
Or maybe the US wants to finally catch up with the third world in unfriendliness.
Re:Reminds me... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, I liked travelling to the US better when all I had to do was check the correct boxes on the amusing green form:
[x] I am not a terrorist
[x] I am not planning a child abduction in the US
Re:Reminds me... (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, I liked travelling to the US better when all I had to do was check the correct boxes on the amusing green form:
[x] I am not a terrorist
[x] I am not planning a child abduction in the US
I visited the US before 9/11:
[x] I am not a communist
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http://cube1986.blogspot.com/2008/11/airport-security-dont-bother-asking.html [blogspot.com]
such gems as :
'are you seeking to engage in immoral activity'
-well, what if I plan to cheat on my wife with my pa? does that mean I can't come in
'are you involved in espionage'
-doh; what did they tell me to answer to this one in spy school? er...
'do you have a mental disorder'
-Gary McKinnon claims asbergers syndrome. Does that mean he can't come in?
Re:Reminds me... (Score:5, Funny)
'do you have a mental disorder'
Why yes, yes I do. I'm a pathological liar on questions like this one.
Re:Reminds me... (Score:4, Funny)
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If somebody is caught doing $bad_thing he denied planning on the form,
even if the case is tricky, he can be prosecuted for lying to immigration.
It's a sort of legal backup.
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To prove he lied to immigration, you first have to prove that he actually did $bad_thing.
Security Theatre has found its target audience, I see.
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Well, lying on that form is a crime. So if you come into the country under false pretenses, they can legally arrest you, whereas I'm not sure what legal standing the US has to prosecute, say war crimes committed in Bosnia.
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That depends on what your definition of "is" is...
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If I've been caught waterboarding someone, is is isn't otherwise it's is and vice-versa. How about you?
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What if you don't HAVE a credit card? What THEN? "Sorry, we can't let you enter the country without a credit card."
If the sole purpose is to fund advertising (as you say they claim), then cash should be an acceptable form of payment. If it is really a ruse to get a credit card number, then one shouldn't have to pay it if one doesn't have one. I, for one, refuse to get into a drawn-out discussion with Border Patrol about my financial decisions.
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If you don't have a credit card, then it must mean that you're trying to do things with untraceable cash. And that means you're a terrorist!
Re:Reminds me... (Score:4, Funny)
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Of course they might spend less than my other half
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And I, as as taxpayer, would rather people be able to visit me without having these dumb systems forced upon them.
I couldn't really care less if a trivial amount of my taxes goes towards giving emergency treatment to someone who needs it, but then I come from one of those weird countries where we have the radical notion of not asking for credit card details because someone's bleeding to death on the pavement.
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Re:Reminds me... (Score:5, Interesting)
Well just so you know, I live in Belgium and if I want to get my paperwork to travel to the US I have to CALL the US embassy (I cannot just go there, no sir, we're all terrorist here in Europe, you see) and without so much as getting a human operator to respond, like to - I don't know, ask me what the hell I want - I just have to hand over my CC number so I can be charged xx dollars, just to get them to make an appointment.
I find that very disturbing, off putting and blatantly rude... It is not because the US can do that that it bloody should. I do not want to go to the US but sometimes the circumstances force me to, but when I do I am treated like a piece of s**t with no rights... It really makes me want to go through all the hassle of getting my visa, then canceling my card and getting a new one.
Re:Reminds me... (Score:5, Insightful)
then canceling my card and getting a new one
Assuming U.S. authorities are using your credit card information to track behavioral patterns, that won't help you much if the card is issued by the same bank. Even banks in Switzerland are routinely turning over information on account holders these days.
Re:Reminds me... (Score:5, Funny)
And that is why I only trust Nigerians to handle my financial affairs.
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If this doesn't get some 'funny' moderations, then the rating system is even more broken than I feared.
Re:Reminds me... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Reminds me... (Score:5, Insightful)
...And don't think for a minute that the issuing bank doesn't keep records of which accounts were issued to what customers and when.
Re:Reminds me... (Score:5, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Reminds me... (Score:5, Informative)
The US already collects vasts amount of information as part of the visa application process for any foreign national, all paid by the applicant.
Different countries pay different amounts. I wish the $10 would be the case. Chileans pay $131 just for a visitor's visa [embajadaeeuu.cl], and that doesn't even include all the expenses in getting the required paperwork.
The US unfriendliness towards visitors you mention has been here for a long time, and it's manifested in many different ways, some subtle, some not.
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Get a non-xenophobic country,
But I'd have to reroll for that, and I've got too much rep grinding invested into this toon.
Are they PCI compliant with those #'s? (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PCI_DSS [wikipedia.org]
Oh, yeah. The rules are different if you're the government than if you're a regular company.
Re:Reminds me... (Score:4, Informative)
Dupe (Score:5, Informative)
Value Added: Information NOT Stored (Score:3, Insightful)
Hush, citizen. (Score:5, Insightful)
Your full, unencrypted credit card information available in our logs to every DHS employee is necessary for us to fight the evil terrorists.
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Absolutely right! You wouldn't believe the number of hookers and the amount of blow needed to keep up our morale here at DHS.
Re:Hush, citizen. (Score:5, Insightful)
Technology has changed, therefore it's necessary for the Supreme Court to rethink some of its past decisions. "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects..." should apply to ALL papers/data even if it's not in the citizen's immediate possession. The government should not be able to obtain your personal credit cards numbers from a 3rd party without first getting a warrant from a judge.
Re:Hush, citizen. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Hush, citizen. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hush, citizen. (Score:5, Interesting)
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The amazing thing about Frankling is that he seems to have been completely the fat, balding, pony-tailed hacker, and he *still* got all the chicks he could want. Guy was some kind of geek god.
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The government should not be able to obtain your personal credit cards numbers from a 3rd party without first getting a warrant from a judge.
Your fingerprint is personal. Your DNA is personal. Your credit card numbers are not personal, they are assigned to you by a large, multinational corporation that lobbies the government for things like overlooking large executive pay packages.
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Your credit card number isn't your property.. it's the property of the credit card company that issued the card. Therefore, they can distribute the number to whoever they want, including the US government. If you don't like them doing this, then protest and possibly stop using credit cards altogether.
At least the probably don't know how to use it... (Score:5, Funny)
If they have that much useless detail on everyone, chances are they won't be able to actually find anything in it. Yay for security through obscurity.
On the other hand, someone's probably going to break in and get all those credit card numbers...
Re:At least the probably don't know how to use it. (Score:5, Interesting)
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They'll fix the problem by hiring a metric buttload of data mining consultants.
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Nothing special. This is a PNR (Score:5, Interesting)
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CRS =
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_reservations_system [wikipedia.org]
Virtual Credit Card Number? (Score:3, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And people bitch about British intrusiveness. (Score:5, Insightful)
"At least CCTV can't read my passport and credit cards."
Yet.
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That's what they call new efficiencies, I believe.
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Do you keep your passport in a Faraday cage?
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I'd rather have NOTE OF ALL THIS! One bad does not make the other bad good!
It's still totalitarian terrorism (and I mean the real definition of that word)!
I guess they won't know too much now... (Score:2)
PCI Compliance? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Not exactly. Any business that processes credit cards has to be PCI compliant. That means truncating the credit card number or encrypting it. So any company that give the DHS access to unencrypted credit card numbers no longer PCI compliant and is liable for damages in the event of a breach (which this may be).
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Chances are that Visa-Mastercard know these numbers exist in the US government system, but do not care. You really only need to be compliant if Visa-Mastercard enforces the compliance with fines... but then again, the fine is $25,000... so to the US government, they may just pay the non-compliance fine to get VM off the government's back.
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Except the government isn't the one collecting the numbers, it's the airlines (or your travel agent/website.) So the government has to be getting them from -somewhere-.
As a person with a greencard (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:As a person with a greencard (Score:4, Interesting)
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Not as a green card holder - do that and they deny you the renewal. An "isolated incident" of course.
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So the only question remaining is: WHY?? I mean are there no better places in the whole world to go? Perhaps even some place with friendly people and fair jobs?
Other nuggets (Score:3, Interesting)
Seat numbers are clearly visible at the end of each flight segment as well.
The history of every PNR (personal name record) has ALWAYS been tracked by CRS systems.
Looks like the flights he was scheduled for had some schedule changes and his seat had to be changed also.
Certainly does a lot of international travel huh?
Customs and Immigration has always been interested in suspicious behavior though.
1. Fly to South America and pay cash for your ticket? Expect to be stopped at re-entry
2. Didn't eat your meal on the way back from Central or South America? Expect to be stopped at re-entry
3. Fly international more than twice a month? Expect to be stopped at re-entry
It's good ole profiling at it's best and there's nothing you can do about it. It's a "national security" issue. I speak from experience. I have been stopped 30 consecutive times on international flights. Every flight I ever took until that passport was renewed.
Re:Other nuggets (Score:5, Informative)
Looks like he went Tampa to London via Houston (used to be Intercontinental) and then mysteriously flew from Charles DeGaulle in Paris back to Tampa via Newark. (Hmmmmmm.. what of the missing segment? Hmm? Hmm?!!!)
They have these crazy things in Europe called "trains" that connect city centres without having to hang around in an unfashionable suburb for a few hours waiting to be put into a metal tube. You don't even have to take your shoes off to get on them.
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Maybe not yet...
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0027131/ [imdb.com]
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You do, however, have to go through passport control ("E.U., schmee-you, that's what we say -- Gordon Brown") to take a train between London and Paris, so I'm surprised the missing segment isn't shown.
Re:Other nuggets (Score:5, Insightful)
Silly Europeans always have such a skewed sense of geography. Newark to Tampa is 1,000 miles, exactly. It's a two and a half hour flight and a 20 hour train ride.
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Silly commenters always have such a skewed sense of reading comprehension. The trips were:
Tampa - Houston - London
Paris (CDG) - Newark - Tampa
The "missing segment" is how the traveler got to Paris from London without flying, not from Newark to Tampa The answer, of course, is a train (ever hear of the Chunnel?)
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You don't even have to take your shoes off to get on them.
...yet.
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2. Didn't eat your meal on the way back from Central or South America? Expect to be stopped at re-entry
The flight crew on your average longhaul flight do not give a flying fuck what you eat, whether you eat, or how much untouched food you leave on your tray. They are not logging everybody's mealtime performance on some secret touchscreen in the forward galley.
Unfortunately, nothing new... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Unfortunately, nothing new... (Score:4, Insightful)
Question: How does any of this stop terrorism? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Question: How does any of this stop terrorism? (Score:5, Insightful)
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It stops terrorism about as well as the Canadian Gun Registry, London CCTV, and the Patriot Acts combined = 0, at least officially according to the General Accounting Office or their countries equivalent. Of course the real number they say, is secret, and zero isn't a real number...
Re:Question: How does any of this stop terrorism? (Score:5, Insightful)
How does the Govt. having this information help the govt. stop terrorism? Anyone?
Their job is not to stop terrorism, but rather to make people "feel" safer.
credit card data not safe (Score:2)
What do you bet we have no recourse when they inevitably release all this credit card data to crooks ?
meal preferences (Score:4, Interesting)
Do they flag:
kosher = maybe friend
halal = terrorist
vegan = hippie scum
Well, if you don't have anything to hide... (Score:5, Insightful)
Not a big deal... (Score:2)
Perhaps I'm out of the loop but I don't see anything here that's outrageous.
It looks like CBP received a dump of your PNR from the airline, period. Any data that's stored in that PNR will be transmitted when it's dumped. Whoopty-fookin-do. It's the AIRLINE that has all this information to begin with.
As for the CBP internal records it makes sense they would track when/where your passport shows up. I know my passport details have either been manually entered or scanned in and out of most countries I've been i
Re:Thank you Navy and EFF (Score:4, Interesting)
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You can't copyright facts, only their presentation.
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Though I am 99% atheist (I occasionally have fantasies of being God and turning people I dislike into pillars of salt or exploding their heads with my mind) I have to say there are amazing similarities between revelations and what we are seeing today. First they get everyone using the same money and/or money networks, then they track them, then they stop those who disagree from using their money completely. Number of the beast.
Seriously, though. The DHS collecting financial instrument data is more about
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I read all of the none Americans gripping about America and all this procedures. Yet, back in the 70 and 80, Germany, Spain, France, Israel, etc. had issues with terrorists and implemented FAR FAR harsher procedures.
So, are you generally mocking non-Americans for being hypocrites, or are you saying that it's OK for the DHS to be like they are because the Stasi was worse...?