CAPPS II Trials Begin in March 287
corporal_clegg writes "According to this story on FoxNews, in March Delta Airlines will begin using a federal database that incorporates credit history and bank records in an effort to identify potential security threats. The federal system - CAPPS II (Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System) - will assign a "threat level" to passengers based upon information in the database and other criteria, such as whether the individual is on government watch lists. 'CAPPS II will collect data and rate each passenger's risk potential according to a three-color system: green, yellow, red. When travelers check in, their names will be punched into the system and the boarding passes encrypted with the ranking.' The scary thing is that no one really knows which databases the government will use or how long the records will remain. Slashdot covered this story in September 2002, and it now seems that the first airline is ready to give it a try. In addition to the links in the previous Slashdot article, a good background on CAPPS II can be found here." Actually, the last story we did on passenger profiling was just a week or two ago.
Also, Poindexter's contracts are still going out (Score:3, Informative)
*ponders* (Score:5, Funny)
{
InitiateSearch();
SetThreatLevel(doom);
};
Ah ... note the first line is commented out. (Score:2, Informative)
All passengers will be considered a threat.
Re:Ah ... note the first line is commented out. (Score:3, Funny)
Solution: decrease passenger numbers.
Solution: cancel all flights.
Threat avoided.
Financial error - company no longer making profit
Solution - replace employees with AI - become non-airline company.
Re:Ah ... note the first line is commented out. (Score:2)
They tried that. The commercial airlines said they could handle security more cheaply than the Feds. They formed private security companies at each airport, and hired "scrubs" i.e. anyone who showed up to work for $8/hr. The result we all know.
Now, in a classic case of the pendulum swinging too far the other way, we have this stupid govt. system which will not stop any terrorists. Not to mention the obvious fact that a situation like 9.11 will never happen again anyway (at least not in the next ten years) beccause the OTEHR PASSENGERS ON THE PLANE WILL FIGHT BACK!
(duh)
I've always been a big fan of cross-counrty road trips anyway. Hey, maybe we'll see some great vidoeconferencing tech in the next few years as a result!
Fiscal No-No (Score:5, Funny)
Oh thats right....poor people are all terrorists.
Just remember if you bounce a check then the terrorists have already won.
Not really.. (Score:5, Interesting)
But that doesn't even matter - I think instead what this system will be looking for is a person not with good credit, or even bad credit, but very little credit history... that's the kind of person that will make "them" wonder what they are up to.
So what you should really be railing against is that people who aren't good consumers (in that they make use of credit and thus build up a record) will be hassled.
Personally, I'm not sure about this either way... in some ways I like it if it means fewer obviously random and stupid searches like they do now. That might only be because I expect to be targeted for searches less as a result.
A funny side note - I recently took a one-way flight and my girlfriend and I were fully searched multiple times. However, if you think about it - people that purchase one way tickets a few days in advance are probably the last ones to worry about!! Instead, I say, be concerned about the passenger that supposedly has it "so together" that they purchased tickets (round trip or otherwise) months in advance... after all, a real terrorist is not going to leave it to chance that he can get a flight on a certain plane a few days in advance.
Re:Not really.. (Score:5, Insightful)
If I was denied, at boarding time, the ability to travel, instead of when I bought the ticket, I would be one very loud and pissed off guy. Credit has nothing to do with travel rights.
Right now, I'm taking my Delta frequent flyer miles and giving them to the make a wish foundation. They have lost my business forever. If all airlines do this, I guess I'll be driving a lot.
You wouldn't be denied (Score:2)
Note that questioning an item on your redit report (which I have done a number of times, even in the last few months) should NEVER clear out your credit history, even the thing you are questioning - it should only add notes or correct data. If that happened then you have a very serious problem indeed (a lot more serious than being searched to get on a plane) and you should seek to get that rectified (assuming you are not better off with a cleared credit report!!).
Re:You wouldn't be denied (Score:2)
Good luck (Score:2)
It's at the point where it makes a lot of sense to get a pilots license and do your own flying, perhaps using some sort of web based brokering service to get a few people together to shoulder the cost of a plan rental for a weekend or whatever. It might save money in the long run, and would certainly save a lot of hassle at the airport... jets are a lot faster but when you factor in the ~3 hour wait to get on the plane and get moving you'd probably still be better off timewise for most trips. Or drive - I prefer driving to flying any day.
Obviously stupid searches are good (Score:5, Insightful)
Whenever you focus your attention on one catagory of people, you make it easier then it could be for another group. All the terrorists have to do is fly their members around a lot, and see who gets checked most often. The ones that don't, carry the bombs and stuff.
No, but I do think... (Score:3, Insightful)
Some random searches are good, sure - but not at the level they are at which is impeding travel for everyone with no benefit that I can discern (do you really think someone couldn't get just about anything through if they really wanted to?). Frankly I would be fine with putting an impervious shield between the pilots and the passengers, and letting us cattle (even the first class cattle) take their chances with nothing more than the metal detectors at the security screening areas they have now and no more near-strip searches. Anyone that tries to take over a plane now is going to meet with stiff resistance from every passenger on the plane now that we all "know" what happens to planes that get hijacked, so I think pretty much all of the searches for things like boxcutters are the very definition of pointlessness.
Re:No, but I do think... (Score:2)
Well, if you knew the kid wasn't going to be searched, you could simply put a timed explosive in his backpack, under his shirt, wherever.
Personaly, I'd be fine with reduced searches
stupid searches are good (Score:3, Insightful)
Any time you focus more resources on one group, you have less on another. There's no getting around that. All the terrorists need to do is send their agents on lots of flights to see which ones get checked least often, and use them to carry the weapons/bombs.
Re:stupid searches are good (Score:2, Funny)
Heh (Score:2)
This is why we're searching everybody (Score:2)
Well, you know what? I think you're a terrorist. Now strip and grab your toes!
Re:Not really.. (Score:2)
I tend to take issue with people that use the term "consumer" to classify me. Stop doing that. I am not a "consumer", I am a customer. The distinction is important. In our current culture, the term "consumer" implies mindless automatons that make purchasing decisions based upon advertising, and clueless people in high places make decisions based upon flawed marketing statistics because they don't understand that we're not "consumers" anymore.
I'm a CUSTOMER now, because I don't need companies to push their wares or services at me via TV commercials or pop-up ads. Thanks to the Net, I can go find whatever I need. So I don't need or want the in-your-face marketers anymore. It's just one more way that Internet is a disruptive technology. If your business is shoving a commercial in my face, I have sad news for you: you're obsolete. I recommend finding a new profession asap.
--K.
Relax! (Score:2, Interesting)
In this context "consumer" is exactly the right word. To the airline you are a customer, but in terms of profiling security risk what they are really looking for (at least partially) is, literally, what kind of consumer you have been - in terms of what debts you have accumulated (and paid off) through the years. If they find no evidence that you have been a consumer of any sort (no credit cards, no mortgages, etc) with no monetary history to speak of, then they would be a lot more likely to find you odd (you have to admit an American with no monetary history is like a cat without fur) and flag you the customer for extra searching, much as I was flagged because I was on a one way flight that I had purchased only days before. That's what profiling is all about, finding patterns that deviate from the norm and looking at them carefully.
It's a crappy way to treat a Customer, but then if the searches affect fewer customers there will also be fewer complaints overall - which is exactly why profiling comes about, because so many people are rigorously searched right now that make no sense to search that they are considering using profiling of some sort to reduce the set of people who have something to complain about and reduce the headache that air travel has become (so that airlines can get back to going bankrupt every ten years instead of every five).
Sadly, the other option (to simply bring searching back to where it was pre911) would never occur to anyone (in the airline industry and government), even though it makes the most sense for everyone and offers an insignificant extra security risk.
Ironic... (Score:5, Insightful)
Today? We are getting a "security" implementation that(purportedly) keeps the information it collects for 50 years. This has been disputed, by the Transportation Department, but it appeared in print, and the retraction was not.
Sad, sad.
Re:Ironic... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What's really sad.. (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Ironic... (Score:2)
Until the GHCQ starts to give guided tours, I'm assuming I have zero privacy in the UK.
sigh... (Score:5, Insightful)
- We don't know what airports this is going to be run at.
- We don't know what databases are going to be used
- What if some of the information is erroneous? How can we correct our own "profile"?
- Lastly...what does my credit check have to do with whether or not I'm going to blow up a plane?
And then they wonder why almost every single airline in the United States is at or near bankruptcy.
"Killing America in the Name of Security"
Re:sigh... (Score:2)
*cough*
Re:sigh... (Score:5, Insightful)
Within arms reach (Score:2, Insightful)
I hate to say it, have for a long time avoided thinking about it. But people really are that stupid. Just can't think about anything that's not within arms reach. Anything they're not exactly in the middle of is beyond comprehension. So lacking reason, they resort to whatever primitive analogs are available, such as emotion. "It feels good to know efforts are underway to ensure my safety."
Re:sigh... (Score:2)
So quite frankly if knowing that these systems are in place discourages (or gasp, even catches in the act) any terrorist, I'M ALL FOR IT.
The rules for hijacking changed with 9/11. Before that, you quietly behaved, waited for them to land, and went about your business after the negotiations concluded - usually without incident to the passengers. Now hijackers would deal with waves of people actively trying to kill them because they feel boxed into a corner. I know I would attempt to beat someone senseless with my thinkpad (and then some) if they tried to take over an airplane with toenail scissors. I'd say most of the world would be more terrified of a Yankee hollering 'lets roll' than the traditional terrorist action we are just beginning to understand. That said, I'd say the discouragement for future aircraft hijacking is in place...at least in US airspace.
Profiling would not have caught the 19 as suicide bombers - other than possibly holding and turning a few over to INS by accident. It would be foolishness to hamper their travel because of the way they dressed or purchased tickets. I think it might be nice to have a airport security clearance for those of us who do travel significantly. I know I missed a connecting flight because some wanker decided my cellphone having a dead battery was suspicious - and the prop job was smaller than most city buses.
Don't get me wrong - airport security sucked then and still does in my book. It takes real cash to get people who really influence security. For the most part, the 'illusion' of security is good enough to keep the armatures at bay. The cost to catch the pros is prohibitive. If the general masses think airports 'are secure', they are for the most part. I'm just real tired of stupid systems being put unquestionably into service in the name of security. This is one of them.
Re:sigh... (Score:5, Insightful)
On the fourth plane, Flight 93, the passengers had cell phones and found out what was really going on, but too late to save the pilot. They sacrificed themselves to stop the terrorists. Had the pilot lived, they might have been able to bring the plane down safely.
On the Shoe-bomber's flight, the passengers knew the score, stopped the Shoe-bomber quickly, and landed safely.
Even in the World Trade Center itself, a complex which could hold up to 50,000 people, less than 3,000 died. The rest, tens of thousands of them, because of wise managers ordering evacuations, and many acts of heroism and compassion, helped each other out.
Why hasn't Al Qaeda attacked America again in this way? Because the people are on to them. These attacks have simply stopped working, because the passengers stopped them. Cowardly thugs that they are, the terrorists are now resorting to taking potshots with rocket launchers well away from any airport, and in places like Kenya rather than the US.
So what good is all your great security? It doesn't stop terrorists, because they are already stopped. It doesn't give Americans any security, in fact it violates the one right that guarantees that Americans will be "secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects", the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution.
CAPPS II violates the privacy and security of Americans. There is no warrant issued, and any probable cause is supposedly provided by the result of the CAPPS II search to justify more searching of their persons, blacklisting, and possible arrest. Combined with Patriot II (if and when it is passed) CAPPS II could turn an innocent vacation into a one way trip to Gitmo for the now former citizen, all because of a computer glitch or an error in one of the databases. And unlike your credit report, there is no law to allow you to view or correct the data that CAPPS II uses.
I have no interest in sacrificing my rights as a native US citizen just for some imagined safety. Even if CAPPS II was somehow able to prevent terrorist acts, it doesn't do a thing for accidents which killed 88,000 more Americans in 2001 than Al Qaeda killed.
Oh, and those 19 terrorists in 2001, they passed CAPPS I with flying colors.
"There is something important to do, no matter how hard or painful."
Mothra (via Moll) "Mothra 3: King Ghidora Attacks"
Re:sigh... (Score:3, Insightful)
Thus we had a system designed to prevent airplane hijacking that was forced to ignore the single most effective predictor: if the person is an Arab.
Without that political correctness (and a number of other stupid things done to the anti-terror apparatus and intelligence apparatus by the Carter and Clinton administration), it is highly likely that the terrorism would have been prevented with the original apprehension of Moussari (or however it's spelled).
Re:sigh... (Score:2)
Man, I hope 3000 MORE people do not die because of such stupid reasoning...
Re:sigh... (Score:2)
Hindsight is 100% forsight, he ? (Score:2)
Re:sigh... (Score:2)
I don't claim that CAPP *would* have caught them if it considered ethnicity, but it might very well have done so.
As far as bigotry... is it bigotry to note that young Arabs are the highest threat for terrorism?
Bigotry is when you stereotype an entire group - for example, call all Arabs terrorists. When you recognize that the statistical risk of one group is significantly greater than another, taking that into account isn't bigotry, it's prudence.
Re:sigh... (Score:2)
Umm
However, as the previous poster mentioned, the system was set up to throw out those results if the passengers in question did not check any luggage.
Wrong! Half the Sept 11 hijackers were picked up (Score:2)
[quote]Nine to 11 of the 19 hijackers on September 11 were were flagged by the original CAPPS, but weren't searched because the system gave a pass to passengers who didn't check their bags, Hudson said. People without checked bags are now included.[/quote]
Don't just spout off FUD -- even if it is FUD in your favor. I don't support CAPPS II, but I do acknowledge that CAPPS did find half the hijackers... but didn't act on them.
The Government Has No Right (Score:5, Interesting)
my wife says (Score:2)
nevermind that boycotting wouldn't change our behavior...we haven't travelled in 10 years.
if Oprah reads Slashdot, maybe she'll take pitty on my story and pay for us to go to Hawaii??
Now WE know (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Now WE know (Score:2)
Not a troll, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Monitoring bank and credit reports will flag questionable purchases like, oh, let's say, 2 tons of fertilizer and a Ryder truck. But what about the ones who don't exhibit that kind of behavior? Credit reports and bank activity aren't going to prevent a hijacker alone, in my opinion.
Re:Not a troll, but... (Score:2)
That's kind of beside the point. I mean, would you feel okay about your ISP reading all of your E-Mails? You haven't done anything wrong, so it's okay right?
It doesn't matter whether or not you've done anything, it's that some bored system admin doesn't have any business reading your mail in the first place. Likewise, some moron working at an airport doesn't really have any business knowing your credit history, and some spook at the NSA doesn't have any right to listen to you cry on the phone while breaking up with your girlfriend -- whether it's supposedly for national security or not.
Do you know what preemptive action really is? It's carrying yourself in a way that people have no reason to bother you in the first place. It's not supplying arms to rogue states, setting up puppet regimes and then bitching about how "undemocratic" those regimes are, right after they decide they don't want to be pimped anymore.
This kind of profiling will never fly w/the ACLU and the like, though.
It didn't fly the first time around because of the racial profiling. However, looking for completely clean credit records is only going to result in more religious profiling for this simple reason: In Islam the idea of giving or receiving interest is completely forbidden, so very strict Muslims aren't even going to be using credits cards, and thus have no history at all. More moderate individuals will charge, but then pay the bill before interest is applied. Others simply don't care at all and approach it secularly. I'm assuming there's other religious beliefs out there that hold this same position.
Some will probably say 'good, very traditional types are more likely to be terrorists.' Well, take into consideration that the 9/11 hijackers charged up a storm of supplies, and supposedly went to strip clubs. Basically, they were your average 20-something American males in terms of their lifestyle. So tell me who exactly you're going to profile for? Religious types? Those individuals in most characteristics didn't even meet that criteria. The average very religious Muslim wouldn't have had much to do with the 9/11 hijackers.
Monitoring bank and credit reports will flag questionable purchases like, oh, let's say, 2 tons of fertilizer and a Ryder truck.
Just remember not to buy toenail clippers or a fingernail file before your next flight I guess, since that might set off their "red alarm."
Like someone else pointed out somewhere in this discussion, these new laws aren't about fighting terrorism, no more than "tougher drug laws" are a "war on drugs." What they are about is conditioning you to accept things you wouldn't ordinarily; being used to having your privacy violated on a regular basis, so that when the totalitarian state finally does come in (as if it hasn't already), you will be too caught up in it to fight.
Re:Not a troll, but... (Score:2)
The whole idea of "govt. trustworthy, people untrustworthy" is wrong. Government is made up of people, who are just as fallible as the average joe, except to the extent that they are under public scrutiny.
As the Nixon era came to an end, changes were made and laws were passed to make it harder for the government to hurt and harass people. My guess is that the pendulum will swing back in that direction in a few years.
Flight (Score:5, Insightful)
I fear that things will degenerate so greatly, that nothing short of armed insurrection will return it to the path of its founders' intent. I fear that day, because if force becomes necessary, then it is already too late.
Re:Flight (Score:2)
Given that everybody has grown accustomed to being searched when they travel, and security has grown accustomed to the people they search being innocent, I think this is a fine thing. People had previously lost the presumption of innocence; it's good to see an instance in which suspects are nearly certain to be innocent. If it were a one-in-a-million court case in which the defendant had done anything, juries would take a lot moe convincing than they do these days.
We live on a slippery slope (Score:2)
Personally I believe in democracy over not violence. To argue justice is better served with the barrel of a gun than through principles and political action runs directly against our framers' intent(s). The Constitution embodies this desire for liberty through order, as the so preamble nicely captures:
Armed insurrection is inconsistent with upholding the Constitution -- it is the path to abrogating it, as was attempted in the Civil War. And before anyone cite Jefferson's words about watering trees with blood (the quote McVeigh wore on his T-shirt when arrested), note that he was soon talked out of his momentary exuberance by a friend.
There are many routes of protest and resistance far short of shooting people (and which people would these be?). What is necessary is for Americans aggrieved to pursue them.
Re:Flight (Score:2)
Yeah well (Score:5, Funny)
What about other means of transportation? (Score:4, Insightful)
My wife and I both predict that within 10 years (most likely less) it will be required to carry "papers" while you travel, even in your car, not just on a plane or some such. Interstate travel will start to be as arduous as international travel. It's quite sickening, actually...
Re:What about other means of transportation? (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyway, we have looked at leaving the country. And unlike these prissy actors/actresses, we have no problem doing it. There's really not much here that isn't in other places. Hell, Bahamian citizenship is extremely easy to get and land is CHEAP there. Canada? I hear that's not too hard to immigrate to. Other than that, we're still looking. Any suggestions?
Re:What about other means of transportation? (Score:2)
Re:What about other means of transportation? (Score:2)
Re:What about other means of transportation? (Score:2)
Not really. You only need enough cash to get your flights and a couple months living expenses. Get there, rent a flat and get a job. You might have to take up a crappy job until you find something more relevant to your skills, but that's not a big deal.
Some countries do have immigration requirements that involve having a certain amount of savings however.
Re:What about other means of transportation? (Score:2)
OK what if... (Score:2)
So...I get flagged red. Now what, they won't let me board? No free peanuts? What exactly will this do TO me (not FOR me, I think we already know that answer).
Alternative to CAPS II (Score:5, Interesting)
We can keep the current system in place with searches and questions for (hopefully) the minority of travellers who would't have an id. If you can take the time to get a driver's license once every couple years, you can take the time to get a background check too.
That's a *VERY* bad idea. (Score:2)
Re:Alternative to CAPS II (Score:2)
Great... (Score:2, Insightful)
I love the land of the free.
wait for exposure.. (Score:2)
Oh, BTW, it is a serious violation of privacy.
Boycott Delta (Score:3, Insightful)
and it doesn't even work (Score:4, Informative)
The colored terror warning levels probably also decrease our actual security by creating a false sense of security -- level green just indicates to terrorists that it's a good time to catch us off guard.
Re:and it doesn't even work (Score:2)
Yup. And this bit of attempted STO and unaccountability:
...doesn't help in the least, because schemes like Carnival Booth just treat the screening system as a black box anyway (interesting tangential parallel to the recent Turing Test stuff btw).
You can't even make an observation like "pissing away freedom", since at least pissing has some tangible benefit to the organism. This is just about control and self-justification. How long until the Carnival Booth paper and others like it are illegal to publish for security reasons? Shurely that sort of thing is even worse than letting the Chinese government see the Ancient American Secrets in the Windows source code!
(not to mention little children pointing at world leaders with no clothes...)
I am a terrorist (Score:2, Informative)
- I am mistakenly listed as a vegitarian on BA.
- I carry lots of hardware when I travel.
- I am a smart ass towards people who ask stupid questions (most security/airline employees).
But seriously, I have already written to the congressmen and senators I helped put in office. If they vote for this they will no longer receive a vote from me.
Enjoy,
"Vote"? (Score:2)
Re:I am a terrorist (Score:2)
You'll probably get your wish, child. But in the world which is rising, (largely due to people like you being dupes), it wont be long before you find yourself next in line.
-Fantastic Lad
So what you're saying then. . . (Score:2)
So I'll interpret that as, "I can't think of a good counter-argument, so instead I'll just sputter and fume about how I fuck my mother. Yeah. That'll show him! Heh Heh! Me is smartest!"
But you do raise an interesting thought. You and your type, (the brain-damaged simpletons of the U.S.), will probably be among the last to be carted off; that is, you're too dumb to pose any threat to the Powers That Be. --You do as you are told and you don't mind working in the salt mines. --And heck, you'll even probably bludgeon any dissidents into pulp if told to by the wise, wise television talky person news head. You're the model citizen!
I stand before you in awe!
-Fantastic Lad
Some elevated humor, anyone? (Score:2)
He's fallen asleep, of course, so they send hostage negotiators on to try and get the people in 23A and 23B off the plane alive.
Random is best! (Score:3, Insightful)
If there is any "methodology" at all to doing this profiling there is a danger that you would just probe the system till you discover the "right" person to send through.
Keep sending through different kinds off people until you know who you can send that would never get checked.
Random is the way to go.
Re:Random is best! (Score:2)
Agreed.
If there is any "methodology" at all to doing this profiling there is a danger that you would just probe the system till you discover the "right" person to send through.
I agree even more.
The correct way to implement this is to not do it.
Police our borders and inbound flights. Police the people who want VISA's to learn at our schools. Police our borders better. Nothing within CAPII prevents 9/11 (or 11/9 to our european friends).
Enjoy,
I simply don't understand.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Perhaps there's a reason public education sucks so badly besides governmental stupidity... perhaps it's governmental genious to get all these fucking idiots to think crap like this is actually good. To me it's absolutely astonishing that a lot of people think protesting should be outright illegal.. do they not comprehend what that means?! This kind of crap almost makes me want to cry, and thanks to the US's ability to influence most every other country with either wads of money or military power there is no escape... "Brave New World" wasn't a fictional book, it was a god damn prophecy.
This is just so damn scary... I've had a gun put to my head by a nervous wreck of a thief, and I am still more scared about our current political climate than I was about that...
Re:I simply don't understand.. (Score:2)
Because Joe Sixpack cares about 1. Getting paid 2. Getting laid 3. Getting a good nite's sleep.
what Joe Sixpack wants (Score:2)
In 1976 Earl Butz, the secretary of agriculture, resigned after it was widely publicized tht he had made a racist remark. Butz's statement had been: "I'll tell you what the coloreds want. It's three things: first, a tight pussy; second, loose shoes; and third, a warm place to shit."
Recently, if I believe what I find on the internet, Butz was elected to the NRA board.
Note that doesn't read "erected to an NRA board". Damn.
^^^ Anyone have some mod points? (Score:2)
Jesus... (Score:5, Insightful)
Not that any of this stuff is even necessary to prevent hijacking (just lock the cabin door, and have passengers fight back), or bombing (use bomb detectors!). Simple, obvious things like that are the way to prevent 9/11 type disasters, not creepy big-brother bullshit.
Its nothing more then a power-grab by totalitarians.
wow, (Score:2)
'nuff said.
Time to get out. . . (Score:5, Interesting)
Homeland passes. Here's what to do. [kuro5hin.org] (This post was a little intense sounding, but still, I believe, entirely valid. It's interesting to look back at where we were in November; not just at how the unimaginable happened, but how it now feels normal).
A German Jew on why he didn't get out in time. [kuro5hin.org] (This post is REALLY informative; it's a story by a German Jew who explains how he let all the warning signs slip past him and didn't get out before the Nazi axe fell. Read this one! It's gold.)
-Fantastic Lad
Oh really? (Score:2)
Heck, people were calling me a conspiracy nut when I was bitching about this stuff long before 9-11, talking about the upcoming world war, psychotic leaders, American concentration camps, economic collapses and such; when none of it was anything more than a whiff upon the wind.
So by my score card, I'm the guy with the clue and you're just another well-meaning dude behind the 8-ball.
There are three stages. .
Basically, I'm a few steps ahead of you. I'm just pointing out the land mines as I pass them. I've been asked sometimes why I bother, but the fact of the matter is that knowledge clogs the arteries if you staunch its flow. So peace to you man, and step where you will.
-Fantastic Lad
Travel Rating: RED (Score:3, Interesting)
Transportation officials say a contractor will be picked soon to build the nationwide computer system, which will check such things as credit reports and bank account activity and compare passenger names with those on government watch lists.
So..
For myself:
Credit History: low to moderate
Bank History: recent purchases of gas, guns, or large widthdrawls
Gov't watchlist: FBI - Cybercrimes
I'm going to have a "RED" rating, which means no air travel according to the article... Do you think this will be open for discussion at the terminal?
Lets not even talk about how many travelers won't be going to DefCon next year.
My credit history is a long run of usually breaking even (and sometimes not), and a few years of decent income and fixing past debts.
My bank history is mixed.. I've had some idiots at banks really mess up my attitude towards banks (see my previous rants). So I've had large sums of cash in banks, and then move the cash.
We won't discus why I'd be watched by the feds.
Consider this.. I'm going out of town for a month (like I did around Christmas).. I may take most of the cash out of my bank account (95%+) to have spending cash, since one of the credit bureaus completely hosed my rating and the bank won't issue me one of those handy-dandy Visa debit cards. I don't have a credit card that I could live on for a few days on the road, much less a month.
I do own guns. I have a small collection. I'm a red-blooded American, and that's one of the founding features of America is the right we have to own guns. Imagine George Washington saying "Now that we've become an independant nation, everyone hand over their guns." hahaha.
I'd almost guarantee that I'll flag as yellow or red if I'm going on vacation.
I wonder if trans-oceanic cruises will pick up more sales now.. If you can't fly in America, you sure won't be able to go anywhere but the Americas (North, Central, or South), unless someone else knows a good way to get to Europe, Asia, or Austraila without a plane.
I know it's a 6-8 hour flight across America, or 40+ hours of driving. They're going to be pushing transportation back years if they say any percentage of America can no longer fly.
Maybe they're just trying to make up for the bucks that the US Federal Gov't has been loosing into Amtrak every year.
I frequently talk to someone in Russia, and he really relates the happenings in America to the old Soviet controls over it's people.. Even down to the name "Homeland Security".
Maybe I should just make up a few extra sets of papers. One I travel with. One I get hotels with, and then one that's really me.
Re:Travel Rating: RED (Score:2)
You realize that this should actually make you look MORE like an "average american citizen", thus reducing your "terrorist quotient" and making you less likely to be flagged?
The government is looking for people who stand out as unusual, lack a long credit history, or show a sudden change in their banking and purchasing patterns.
And I'd almost guarantee that you won't. You're might think you are unusual, but as far as the government computers are concerned, you're like thousands of other citizens out there.With your history, you might have a difficult time getting a car loan, but you won't have any trouble getting on an airliner.
Simple Solution (Score:2, Insightful)
CAPPS is not meant to prevent terrorism. It is meant to keep dissidents under control, and if possible out of our country. It is also meant to justify the massive amounts of information that the government is now compiling on every one of us.
This is part of an obvious trend of policies that eliminate privacy and freedom. Fun activity: Next time the terrorist threat level goes from yellow to orange watch C-Span to learn about what new laws the Big Brother has planned to make us safer. There is a direct correlation between the "terror alert color" and how Orwellian government proposals get. Last time it was orange, Bush told us that we had to attack Iraq because they support terror, subtlely implying that by attacking Iraq we would reduce our terrorist threat.
Our president claims that invading a middleastern country will reduce our threat of terrorism. CAPPS is not about terrorism, just like Iraq is not about terrorism, just like (fill in the blank) is not about terrorism. Wake up and smell the government.
By the way, did anyone else see the news story about how hacked Direct TV cards support terrorism? Nothing supports terrorism more than paying your taxes.
CAPPS makes terrorism easier (Score:3, Informative)
This article, http://www.firstmonday.dk/issues/issue7_10/chakra
demonstrates how:
"Abstract
Carnival Booth: An Algorithm for Defeating the Computer-Assisted Passenger Screening System by Samidh Chakrabarti and Aaron Strauss.
To improve the efficiency of airport security screening, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) deployed the Computer Assisted Passenger Screening system (CAPS) in 1999. CAPS attempts to identify potential terrorists through the use of profiles so that security personnel can focus the bulk of their attention on high-risk individuals. In this paper, we show that since CAPS uses profiles to select passengers for increased scrutiny, it is actually less secure than systems that employ random searches. In particular, we present an algorithm called Carnival Booth that demonstrates how a terrorist cell can defeat the CAPS system. Using a combination of statistical analysis and computer simulation, we evaluate the efficacy of Carnival Booth and illustrate that CAPS is an ineffective security measure. Based on these findings, we argue that CAPS should not be legally permissible since it does not satisfy court-interpreted exemptions to the U.S. Constitution's Fourth Amendment. Finally, based both on our analysis of CAPS and historical case studies, we provide policy recommendations on how to improve air security."
CAPPS II Airlines Bankruptcies in the making (Score:2)
And for what? If I rob a bank what are the chances that I will rob it again knowing that security has been changed?
If I wanted to live like an Israeli afraid of everyone I would have moved ot Israel!!!
Ashcroft we want our constitution back!
Coming to a country near you... (Score:3, Funny)
First there was offshore IT...
Don't like it, get the hell out. Or at least write your representative.
What a stupid move (Score:2)
SMRT MOVE AIRLINES!!!
I think they're using the wrong colours... (Score:2, Insightful)
Racist law or racist customs? (Score:3, Informative)
Here's the case of the nationalized Canadian citizen who was deported "back" to his homeland of Syria and has not been heard from since:
http://www.globeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/PE story/TGAM/20021014/UDEPON/International/internati onal/internationalAmericasHeadline_temp/4/4/6/
Bernadette Devlin McCaliskey, the world-renowned Irish civil rights leader was refused entry into the United States of Ashcroft. At Chicago's O'Hare, she was told that she presented a danger and wouldn't be permitted to step foot on American soil. She begged them to recheck their computer. She insisted there had to be a mistake. She told them she came in peace. They said that Tony Blair's British government had told them by fax a different story. They said she was a risk. Yes, this is the same Devlin who at 21 became the youngest MP elected to Parliament. Deported:
http://www.ruminatethis.com/archives/000946.html
a Canadian citizen who was deported to India:
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article16 89.htm
Last week, Eugene Angelopoulos arrived at JFK enroute to New York University, where he had been invited to speak at a conference on Philosophy and Politics. The Greek academic was instead detained at the airport, shackled and interrogated. He was asked to explain his views about an American war on Iraq, and immigration officials demanded to know if he was "anti-American." Ultimately, he found his way back to Athens, but his NYU stint was not to be, and he was shaken to the core.
Hmmm, (Score:2)
"When travelers check in, their names will be punched into the system..."
I wonder is this system will be equally inept. hope so, I could do with a decent laugh.
Imagine...
Mr Brian Sladen, I'm arresting you on the grounds that the computer thinks you must be a terrorist specialising in encryption...
Prototype (Score:2)
If the authorities think it works "well enough", they'll be extending it to anything they can get control of.
FOIA is your best tool against this. (Score:2)
As an aside, an Expedia [expedia.com] ad popped up when I went to that article. I love it when collusion with advertisers is that obvious.
Will CAPPSII queries show up on credit reports? (Score:2)
Dealing with Employers that Perform Credit Checks [slashdot.org]
If yes, then frequent fliers are going to get the "too many queries" credit rating penalty, which may cause some uproar due to the fact that some people will get denied credit because the CAPPSII system pushed them over the edge.
Re:And instead of applauding... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And instead of applauding... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:And instead of applauding... (Score:2)
Re:And instead of applauding... (Score:4, Interesting)
Applaud? Of course not. I never applaud those that rob me. To "protect" my way of life by not allowing me to live it?
I consider this effort not only ill-considered with regard to its likely effectiveness and potential for harm to 3rd parties, but additionally for its disregard for the rights of those affected.
Re:And instead of applauding... (Score:2)
Nor do I - the guy at Radio Shack doesn't need my phone number to give me my parts, so long as I have my Federal Reserve Notes. If I use a credit card, I'm automatically giving RatShack my phone number, though. (And I'm also giving him something more useful - my CC number!)
Nor would I permit the cops into my place without a warrant. I wouldn't resist, but I'd continually repeat that they were unwelcome here, and I'd continually ask them to leave, and I'd sue 'em into the Stone Age after they left.
At an airport, however, I've consented to a search of myself and my belongings - by virtue of all the large friendly signs saying, in a vaguely EULA-like way, that by Crossing This Line, I consent to such a search. If I don't want to be searched at the airport, the sign reminds me that I have a right to leave the airport.
> Giving up something so personal as my banking records is so entirely contrary to my way of life that I can find no conceivable grounds that your statement should apply.
Then I presume you've never filed for income tax, nor had the IRS come looking for you? Dude! You da man! How do you pull that off? Inquiring minds wanna evade!
Free clue: The drone at the airport sees "Green", "Yellow", or "Red". Maybe he sees your name and your flight itinerary. He sees none of the information that goes into the "green", "yellow", or "red", because he has no need to know.
Better clue: The alternative is to rely on the personal judgement of the drone. After eight hours of repeating "go ahead" at 10-second intervals, punctuated only by "hunh, that wun looks like an ay-rab, search him" and "ohfug, done to many ay-rabz, gunna get in trubl, better feel up that guy's grandma", the drone at the ticket counter or checkpoint would be highly unlikely to recognize Osama bin Ladin himself. The job is that mind-numbing.
So you start by building a system that does as much of the recognizing as practical for your drone. Even after eight hours of staring at a screen of "green" blocks, and even considering the drone is a government employee, there should be enough neurons still functioning at the end of the day to recognize that "yellow" (maybe one in a thousand) is not "green", and that "red" (probably one in a million) is also not "green".
You don't do that for privacy - you do it so that the system of "OK", "suspicious", and "terminate" works. (And so that it takes no more than a few seconds for most passengers, because it has to work for millions of people per day.)
But boiling down everything about someone into a block of green, yellow, or red pixels also protects your privacy pretty well.
The only other way I've seen of passenger profiling - the "El Al" method of a 5-minute heart-to-heart between a security guard (who has no sense of humor, as well he shouldn't) and every passenger. That method won't work here - because the air traffic volume in the US is vastly higher than that of Israel. But again, a happy side effect of automation of the profiling process is that your privacy is actually more protected than with a manual system.
Re:And instead of applauding... (Score:2, Insightful)
And does it work, if used in place of more substantial security? El Al, as you mentioned, really does have good security. Yes, it's expensive; yes, it would be very difficult to scale to the volume we need. But we need to decide how much we care about security -- and, if we care enough to do it right, replace "feel good" measures that violate privacy with little effect in favor of measures that actually work. I object quite strongly to gratuitous gathering of information -- but less so to actual security measures (like placing all luggage in decompression chambers prior to loading).
Additionally, I simply can't conceive of an algorithm for detecting terrorists so selective that it will flag only 1 in every 10^6 as red and still be able to catch the actual terrorists out of the crowd. I've dealt with neural network systems (probably one of the best ways of going about something like this) and have quite a bit of respect for them -- but simply not that much.
Certainly, relying on the security guard's judgement may not be much better -- but the grandparent post's claim that building a database with my banking information will "protect [my] way of life" is just a bit much to swallow.
Re:One more reason to get my BFR done (Score:2, Insightful)
Let's see, guy arrested for selling modchips, cease and desist letters sent to sites distrobuting OpenOffice, Lexmark suing third party toner refillers and now this...
I really think it's time to rename "Your Rights Online" to "Another one Bites the Dust". My rights have all left.
It really freaks me out that if I want to get on an airplane, I'm assigned a risk factor based on who knows what kind of information. But if I wanted to buy a gun, I can just go down to Wal-Mart.
Of course, if I sold modchips or toner cartredges I refilled, or the RIAA happens to notice the MP3s on my server (never mind they're original songs I wrote), I'm a criminal. Let's just hope CAPPS II isn't tied into any kind of RIAA piracy database...
Re:One more reason to get my BFR done (Score:3, Informative)
If you want to stay private, you'll have to get the training but not the rating. I'm a (rusty) CFII/MEII and what's that knocking at the door? I'm sure I'm in some damn national security database.
I refuse to believe anything they're doing would have stopped the 9/11 crowd, except perhaps enforcing existing immigration laws accurately (are they even doing that?).