TSA comment period open until June 24
#1
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TSA comment period open until June 24
The TSA has finally acceded to a court order (resulting from a law suit brought by EPIC - http://epic.org ) and opened a comment period on the naked body scan machines (and anything else related to their protocols you want to mention). It has taken years for TSA to do this - the Court of Appeals ruled in July 2011. The TSA has also avoided publicizing the opportunity to comment, first putting up a post about it on its blog, and then taking it down.
To comment you should go to:
http://www.regulations.gov/#!docketD...=TSA-2013-0004
For EPIC's suggestions and background: http://epic.org/TSAcomment/EPICrec.pdf
For an interesting discussion on government oversight of travelers, and on the opportunity to comment:
http://www.cato.org/events/travel-su...eler-intrusion
For ongoing reporting on the TSA see: http://tsanewsblog.com/
To comment you should go to:
http://www.regulations.gov/#!docketD...=TSA-2013-0004
For EPIC's suggestions and background: http://epic.org/TSAcomment/EPICrec.pdf
For an interesting discussion on government oversight of travelers, and on the opportunity to comment:
http://www.cato.org/events/travel-su...eler-intrusion
For ongoing reporting on the TSA see: http://tsanewsblog.com/
#3
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Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 27,709
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The policy change on knives has been postponed. See http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/0...n_3135491.html
Pilots and cabin staff don't have to go through the scanners, right? Actually, I am less concerned about the scanners than the grope aka pat-downs, but with a 54% false positive rate with the millimeter wave machines, grope-downs become likely even if you don't opt out.
Pilots and cabin staff don't have to go through the scanners, right? Actually, I am less concerned about the scanners than the grope aka pat-downs, but with a 54% false positive rate with the millimeter wave machines, grope-downs become likely even if you don't opt out.
#4
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The comment period is still open, and a lot of people are expressing their discontent.
http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2013...-body-scanners
http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2013...-body-scanners
#5
Joined: Jan 2003
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Pilots and cabin crew do go through scanners and sometimes more searches depending on the people conducting it.There is a "known crewmember" ID now but quite a few airports do not include it.
I have had double knee replacements and you cannot believe what I go through every week for work!
I have had double knee replacements and you cannot believe what I go through every week for work!
#7
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Joined: Feb 2006
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A blog post from a just-resigned TSA employee with more reasons why you should comment - only 20 days left.
http://tsanewsblog.com/10923/news/an...lls-the-beans/
He says (among other interesting things):
"It was the TSA’s use of the full-body scanners that prompted me to first speak out and voice my opinion that the technology represented a wasteful, reckless, and unnecessary infringement upon people’s privacy, an opinion informed by several years’ experience operating the full body scanners"
And: "we TSA screeners on the floor-level soon learned that the scanners essentially did not work"
http://tsanewsblog.com/10923/news/an...lls-the-beans/
He says (among other interesting things):
"It was the TSA’s use of the full-body scanners that prompted me to first speak out and voice my opinion that the technology represented a wasteful, reckless, and unnecessary infringement upon people’s privacy, an opinion informed by several years’ experience operating the full body scanners"
And: "we TSA screeners on the floor-level soon learned that the scanners essentially did not work"
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