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islamirama
06-13-2008, 04:59 AM
Big Uncle Is Watching

Judging from my last few flying experiences, the TSA, Homeland Security Department, and all major airlines are not going to be satisfied until they are all out of business. From the cattle call lines, rude customer service, and friendly reminders in my luggage that it’s been searched by a professional, I no longer fly anywhere unless I have to for work.
Today the list of destinations that I will refuse to ever vacation grew ten cities longer:


Body-scanning machines that show images of people underneath their clothing are being installed in 10 of the nation’s busiest airports in one of the biggest public uses of security devices that reveal intimate body parts.

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) recently started using body scans on randomly chosen passengers in Los Angeles, Baltimore, Denver, Albuquerque and at New York’s Kennedy airport.


Airports in Dallas, Detroit, Las Vegas and Miami will be added this month. Reagan National Airport in Washington starts using a body scanner today. A total of 38 machines will be in use within weeks.
“It’s the wave of the future,” said James Schear, the TSA security director at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, where two body scanners are in use at one checkpoint.
[...]


“We’re just scratching the surface of what we can do with whole-body imaging,” Schear said.


That’s what I was afraid of. This is really a Department of Perversion and Psychosexual Assault and the invasion of privacy risks and potential for abuse is evident in every single one of it’s uses. It’s a child pR0nography machine as it will be taking photos of underage children every time they are screened. The “security officer” whose job will be to get up every morning and examine the naked bodies of everyone taking flights that day will undoubtedly be a masturbator of the first order while he mans the digital gloryholes of the 21st century:


The TSA says it protects privacy by blurring passengers’ faces and deleting images right after viewing. Yet the images are detailed, clearly showing a person’s gender. “You can actually see the sweat on someone’s back,” Schear said.
[...]


I’m delighted by this development,” said Clark Kent Ervin, the former Homeland Security inspector general whose reports urged the use of body scanners. “This really is the ultimate answer to increasing screeners’ ability to spot concealed weapons.”

A lot of people concealing weapons in the sweat on their backs these days? It was unfair for me to character this is a Digital Gloryhole for the 21st Century. Gloryholes have two willing participants.


Without a doubt this is a clear violation of a person’s right to be secure in the persons and they are not going to listen until people boycott the cities clamoring for the right to ogle you, your wife, and children naked in exchange for what they are calling “security”.


“Most passengers don’t think it’s any big deal,” Schear said. “They think it’s a piece of security they’re willing to do.”

Wrong. The idea of Uncle Sam in a polyester blue security guard’s outfit leering at sweat glistening down my ample privates isn’t what this country is about and the fact that Rear Admiral Schear is taking his former title a little too literally comes as little surprise considering who he supported for President.


My opposition to this gross personal assault is not based on some Judeo-Christian sanctity I hold for the human form, as I have none, but rather the one I hold for personal liberty. That the government refuses to recognize even a prima facie respect for individual privacy is the reason why every Amendment in the Bill of Rights start with “The Congress Shall Make No Law…”
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islamirama
06-15-2008, 11:41 PM
10 airports install body scanners
Devices can peer under passengers' clothes

By Thomas Frank

BALTIMORE — Body-scanning machines that show images of people underneath their clothing are being installed in 10 of the nation's busiest airports in one of the biggest public uses of security devices that reveal intimate body parts.


The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) recently started using body scans on randomly chosen passengers in Los Angeles, Baltimore, Denver, Albuquerque and at New York's Kennedy airport.


Airports in Dallas, Detroit, Las Vegas and Miami will be added this month. Reagan National Airport in Washington starts using a body scanner today. A total of 38 machines will be in use within weeks.


"It's the wave of the future," said James Schear, the TSA security director at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, where two body scanners are in use at one checkpoint.


Schear said the scanners could eventually replace metal detectors at the nation's 2,000 airport checkpoints and the pat-downs done on passengers who need extra screening. "We're just scratching the surface of what we can do with whole-body imaging," Schear said.


The TSA effort could encourage scanners' use in rail stations, arenas and office buildings, the American Civil Liberties Union said. "This may well set a precedent that others will follow," said Barry Steinhardt, head of the ACLU technology project.


Scanners are used in a few courthouses, jails and U.S. embassies, as well as overseas border crossings, military checkpoints and some foreign airports such as Amsterdam's Schiphol.


The scanners bounce harmless "millimeter waves" off passengers who are selected to stand inside a portal with arms raised after clearing the metal detector. A TSA screener in a nearby room views the black-and-white image and looks for objects on a screen that are shaded differently from the body. Finding a suspicious object, a screener radios a colleague at the checkpoint to search the passenger.


The TSA says it protects privacy by blurring passengers' faces and deleting images right after viewing. Yet the images are detailed, clearly showing a person's gender. "You can actually see the sweat on someone's back," Schear said.


The scanners aim to strengthen airport security by spotting plastic and ceramic weapons and explosives that evade metal detectors and are the biggest threat to aviation. Government audits have found that screeners miss a large number of weapons, bombs and bomb parts such as wires and timers that agents sneak through checkpoints.


"I'm delighted by this development," said Clark Kent Ervin, the former Homeland Security inspector general whose reports urged the use of body scanners. "This really is the ultimate answer to increasing screeners' ability to spot concealed weapons."


The scanners do a good job seeing under clothing but cannot see through plastic or rubber materials that resemble skin, said Peter Siegel, a senior scientist at the California Institute of Technology.


"You probably could find very common materials that you could wrap around you that would effectively obscure things," Siegel said.


Passengers who went through a scanner at the Baltimore airport last week were intrigued, reassured and occasionally wary. The process took about 30 seconds on average.


Stepping into the 9-foot-tall glass booth, Eileen Reardon of Baltimore looked startled when an electronic glass door slid around the outside of the machine to create the image of her body. "Some of this stuff seems a little crazy," Reardon said, "but in this day and age, you have to go along with it."


Scott Shafer of Phoenix didn't mind a screener looking at him underneath his shorts and polo shirt from a nearby room. The door is kept shut and blocked with floor screens. "I don't know that person back there. I'll never seem them," Shafer said. "Everything personal is taken out of the equation."
Steinhardt of the ACLU said passengers would be alarmed if they saw the image of their body. "It all seems very clinical and non-threatening — you go through this portal and don't have any idea what's at the other end," he said.


Passengers scanned in Baltimore said they did not know what the scanner did and were not told why they were directed into the booth.
Magazine-size signs are posted around the checkpoint explaining the scanners, but passengers said they did not notice them.


Darin Scott of Miami was annoyed by the process.


"If you don't ask questions, they don't tell you anything," Scott said. When he asked a screener technical questions about the scanner, "he could not answer," Scott said.


TSA spokeswoman Sterling Payne said the agency is studying passenger reaction and could "get more creative" about informing passengers. "If passengers have questions," she said, "they need to ask the questions."
Passengers can decline to go through a scanner, but they will face a pat-down.


Schear, the Baltimore security director, said only 4% of passengers decline.
In Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport, where scanners have been tested since last year as an alternative to pat-downs, 90% of passengers choose to be scanned, the TSA says.


"Most passengers don't think it's any big deal," Schear said. "They think it's a piece of security they're willing to do."


http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20080606/a_bodyscan06.art.htm

UK has a similar scanner but not intrusive like this one:
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islamirama
06-15-2008, 11:42 PM
Various News articles/pics on the topic: http://www.wikio.com/discussion/629101


some commments from users, worth thinking about:
  • Call it what it is - an electronic strip search
  • how long till it hits youtube?
  • make way for another genre of amateur porn
  • I am wondering how long until someone starts selling these online. Honestly. i give it 6 months
  • I'm predicting a surge in the number of applications for these otherwise boring airport jobs...
  • "Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."




Leave it to the TSA to come up with new ways to check out what you're packing. In this case, those body-scanning machines we've known about for some time are being installed in 10 airports. They are already being used in Los Angeles, Baltimore, Denver, Albuquerque, and New York's JFK. Later this month, the TSA will add the bum-looking devices to major airports in Dallas, Detroit, Las Vegas, and Miami. By bouncing millimeter waves off passengers, the scanners produce a black-and-white image that's detailed enough to see the sweat on someone's back (among other things). The program is aimed at detecting objects such as plastic and ceramic weapons that aren't normally picked up by traditional methods.

The technology does have a couple drawbacks, however: it can't see through plastic or rubber materials that resemble skin. Keep that in mind the next time you wear vinyl pants on your next trip to Mars, kids.
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islamirama
06-15-2008, 11:43 PM
CAIR WARNS OF INVASIVE BODY SCANS AT U.S. AIRPORTS

Muslim group reminds passengers of their right to request an alternative measure

(WASHINGTON, D.C., 6/13/08 ) The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) today warned American Muslims and others concerned with personal privacy of a security procedure recently implemented by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) that scans full-body images of passengers through their clothing, revealing intimate body parts to screeners.

According to USA Today, the body-scanning machines are being used on randomly-selected passengers at airports in Phoenix , Los Angeles , Baltimore , Denver , Albuquerque , and New York ’s JFK airport. They are scheduled to be installed at airports in Dallas , Detroit , Las Vegas , Miami , and Reagan National Airport near Washington , D.C. this month.
SEE: 10 Airports Install Body Scanners (USA Today)

The TSA website describes the process through which the machines bounce harmless radio waves off the passenger’s body, which constructs a three-dimensional image that is projected on a monitor in the security scanner’s room. The TSA characterizes the procedure as a “voluntary alternative to a pat-down,” and says it blurs passengers’ faces and does not store the images to protect privacy.
SEE: Whole Body Imaging - Millimeter Wave

However, concerns have been raised over the level of detail shown by the machines, which are capable of projecting graphic images of a person’s body, revealing private body parts and other intimate details.
SEE: ACLU Backgrounder on Body Scanners and ‘Virtual Strip Searches’

“CAIR is working with other organizations to address the privacy issues that this technology presents,” said CAIR Civil Rights Manager Khadija Athman. “In the meantime, it is important that you know that you have the option to request a pat-down by a security officer of your gender in a private room instead of going through the body-scanning machine.”

Athman said CAIR, in cooperation with other civil rights organizations, is insisting that the TSA implement a program of fully informing passengers who volunteer for the scan of its privacy implications.

CAIR, America 's largest Islamic civil liberties group, has 35 offices and chapters nationwide and in Canada . Its mission is to enhance the understanding of Islam, encourage dialogue, protect civil liberties, empower American Muslims, and build coalitions that promote justice and mutual understanding.
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جوري
06-16-2008, 01:26 AM
Do you know what is the saddest part of this.. I have seen some elderly folks utterly humiliated..
Anyone knows that pacemakers set off alarm.. but there are many with such conditions as hemochromatosis ( a metabolic disorder of iron deposition) and hemosiderosis (iron accumulation due to transfusion, medication etc) that trigger these machines just the same.. imagine having to walk around already ailing and in need of a doctor's note at all times and still being hassled if not down right molested by these creeps...What is worst is a dear friend of my dad and a very respected man was asked to strip even his grandaughter out of her diaper, imagine, accusing elderly couples of planting bombs on their grandaughter?

The people they need to strip search are the likes of bush and croonies, frankly given their history in abu gharib, I say they enjoy the voyeur/exhibitionist aspect of it..

I need to stay away from world's affairs.. the news here always infuriates me..

:w:
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islamirama
06-16-2008, 01:49 AM
Sadly american population lacks common sense, and a lot of it! they can follow the book like a dumb dog and can't think for themselves. I guess that's what happens when you are brainwashed to do, say, believe whatever your media preaches you.

What can i say about a society that thrives on sexualism and voyeurism as well s pornography. It's only natural these perverts will invent machines that strip you naked for their enjoyments. Did you know the machines in UK are not as detailed as these american ones?
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north_malaysian
06-16-2008, 03:59 AM
maybe people should go to the airport bare naked... and Bush should declare airports as nudist colonies :exhausted
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crayon
06-16-2008, 09:06 AM
security- Sir, I need you to step aside please. I need to search you.
kumar- Did I beep?
security- Oh no, you didn't beep. Just a random security check. If you can just step aside, please. Just over here.
kumar- Random, huh?
security- Yeah.
kumar- So this has nothing to do with my ethnicity?...

Sighhh. People I predict to be "randomly" selected:
1-arabs
2-muslims
3-anyone who looks arab or muslim
4-anyone with a headscarf on
5-young children and old people (chosen by perverted security officers)
6-the ratio of men to women will be 1:50 or so.
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IbnAbdulHakim
06-16-2008, 09:08 AM
jazakAllah khair for sharing this.

now i'll know to research who uses these machines before i ever decide to go anywhere.


or maybe i can just travel by ship...
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crayon
06-16-2008, 09:10 AM
:eek:
I just saw a picture of what a scan will look like!!!!!!!
Hot dammmn. I didn't think it would be that bad.

edit- "According to Farran Technologies, a manufacturer of one model of the millimeter wave scanner, the technology exists to extend the search area to as far as 50 meters beyond the scanning area which would allow security workers to scan a large number of people without their awareness that they are being scanned." from wikipedia.

another edit- apparently, in some airports you have the option of either doing the scan or being patted down.. so long as its a person of the same gender, then the pat down would be a much better option, of course.
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Tania
06-16-2008, 07:44 PM
They have no shame at all
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Izyan
06-16-2008, 08:08 PM
You do realize you can opt out of all these scans and go with the normal pat down right? That's what I do and I travel a lot for work.
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crayon
06-17-2008, 07:23 AM
format_quote Originally Posted by Izyan
You do realize you can opt out of all these scans and go with the normal pat down right? That's what I do and I travel a lot for work.
Yeah, that's true... Although not all airports have that, they said some have that option, which means others don't. I'm not sure whether some is the majority or minority though..
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cute123
06-17-2008, 07:47 AM
this is simply ridiculous
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islamirama
11-02-2008, 06:30 AM
This is a country that has legalized prostitution and force women into prostitution if they want unemployment benefits, yet they are the only ones to call the virtual strip search of every passenger as it is, nonsense.


Full-body airport scanner "nonsense?"

BERLIN (Reuters) – Germany will not participate in EU proposals for airports to use full-body scanner security checks, which have raised privacy issues, its interior ministry said Friday.
"I can tell you in all clarity that we will not take part in this nonsense," a spokeswoman for the interior ministry told a regular news conference.


The executive European Commission proposed last month to add body scanners to a list of security measures that can be used at airports in the 27-country bloc.


EU lawmakers criticized the scanners in a resolution on Thursday, saying they were equivalent to "a virtual strip search" and raised serious human rights concerns. The lawmakers called for a detailed study of the technology before it is used.


The Commission says a number of EU states including the Netherlands already use body scanners and the EU executive wanted to harmonize conditions in which they can be operated.
The scanners do not exist at German airports and have sparked vivid criticism by politicians across the political spectrum.


(Reporting by Kerstin Gehmlich; Editing by Matthew Jones)


http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081024/od_nm/us_germany_airports_1
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