iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Better Airport Scanners Delayed By Privacy Fears

JOELLE TESSLER and ARTHUR MAX   12/28/09 08:52 PM ET   AP

Airport

WASHINGTON — High-tech security scanners that might have prevented the Christmas Day attempt to blow up a jetliner have been installed in only a small number of airports around the world, in large part because of privacy concerns over the way the machines see through clothing.

The body-scanning technology is in at least 19 U.S. airports, while European officials have generally limited it to test runs.

Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian accused of trying to ignite explosives aboard a Northwest Airlines jet as it was coming in for a landing in Detroit, did not go through such a scan where his flight began, at Amsterdam's Schiphol airport.

The full-body scanner "could have been helpful in this case, absolutely," said Evert van Zwol, head of the Dutch Pilots Association.

But the technology has raised significant concerns among privacy watchdogs because it can show the body's contours with embarrassing clarity. Those fears have slowed the introduction of the machines.

Jay Stanley, public education director for the American Civil Liberties Union's Technology and Liberty Program, said the machines essentially perform "virtual strip searches that see through your clothing and reveal the size and shape of your body."

Abdulmutallab passed through a routine security check at the gate in Amsterdam before boarding, officials said. He is believed to have tucked into his trousers or underwear a small bag holding PETN explosive powder, and possibly a liquid detonator.

Because such items won't set off metal detectors, the U.S. Transportation Security Administration, part of the Department of Homeland Security, has begun installing two types of advanced scanning machines that provide a more detailed picture.

These machines, which can cost six figures each, screen airline passengers without physical contact. They can reveal plastic or chemical explosives and non-metallic weapons.

Such scanners "provide the best protection for the widest range of threats," said Joe Reiss, vice president of marketing for American Science & Engineering Inc. The company makes machines for prisons, military agencies, foreign customs patrols and other customers but does not have a contract with TSA.

TSA has deployed 40 "millimeter wave" machines, which use radio waves to produce a three-dimensional image based on energy reflected back from the body.

Six of those machines, which are made by L-3 Communications Holdings Inc., are being used for what TSA calls "primary screenings" at six U.S. airports: Albuquerque, N.M.; Las Vegas; Miami; San Francisco; Salt Lake City; and Tulsa, Okla.

This means passengers go through the scans instead of a metal detector, although they can elect to receive a pat-down search from a security officer instead.

The remainder of the machines are being used at 13 U.S. airports for secondary screening of passengers who set off a metal detector: Atlanta; Baltimore/Washington; Denver; Dallas/Fort Worth; Indianapolis; Jacksonville and Tampa, Fla.; Los Angeles; Phoenix; Raleigh-Durham, N.C.; Richmond, Va.; Ronald Reagan Washington National; and Detroit. Travelers can opt for a pat-down instead in those instances as well.

The agency also says it has bought 150 "backscatter" machines, which use low-level X-rays to create a two-dimensional image of the body, from Rapiscan Systems, a unit of OSI Systems Inc. Those machines, which cost $190,000 each, are expected to be deployed in U.S. airports in 2010.

"The machine gives a very accurate and very precise image of things on the body that are not the body," said Peter Kant, executive vice president of global government affairs for Rapiscan.

Last June, however, because of privacy concerns, the House voted 310-118 to prohibit the use of whole-body imaging for primary screening. The measure, still pending in the Senate, would limit the use of the devices to secondary screening.

"As a society, we're going to have to figure out the balance between personal privacy and the need to secure an aircraft," said Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, who sponsored the measure. "And there is no easy answer."

Executives at the companies that make the machines insist there are ways to strike that balance.

Kant said the technology has evolved enough to produce body images that look like chalk outlines. In addition, privacy filters can blur faces, noted Colin McSeveny, communications manager for Smiths Detection, a British company that makes millimeter wave machines that are being tested in Europe and the U.S.

For its part, TSA said it safeguards privacy by ensuring that all full-body images are viewed in a walled-off location not visible to the public. In addition, the security officer assisting the passenger cannot view the image and the officer who views the image never sees the passenger. Also, the machines cannot store, print or transmit any images they produce.

After all, McSeveny said, "all they are looking for is something that shouldn't be there."

In addition to the scanning machines in place or recently purchased by TSA, the agency says it plans to buy 300 more.

The European Union Parliament, however, voted in October 2008 for more study of privacy before authorizing the machines' full deployment in European airports.

Amsterdam's airport has been running a test project with full-body scanners for three years, mainly for a few European flights. One machine being tested there for the past five weeks, made by L-3, is designed to enhance passengers' privacy by having software, rather than a human, analyze the image generated by the scanner. If the software detects an anomaly – something strapped to a leg, for instance – it alerts a human screener to look at the person's leg directly.

"So nobody sees any images," said Ron Louwerse, the airport's chief of security. "The results are very, very good. I'm very confident about it."

In May, TSA abandoned "puffer machines" made by General Electric Co. and Smiths Detection, which blew air onto passengers to dislodge trace amounts of explosives. The government said the machines cost too much to maintain and regularly broke down when exposed to dirt or humidity. There are still 18 puffer machines deployed at U.S. airports.

___

Arthur Max reported from Amsterdam. Associated Press writer Natasha T. Metzler and AP Television Producer Faryl Ury in Washington contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST TECH

Filed by Jose Antonio Vargas  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 29
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
08:58 AM on 01/18/2010
Please arrive three days prior to your flight…
RMR: A Message From Transport Canada.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZfbTlYpKYo
02:02 PM on 01/14/2010
Old Study - Airport SECURITY Measures - Full Body SCANNERS - “unzips double-stranded DNA, creating bubbles in the double strand that could significantly interfere with processes such as gene expression and DNA replication”.

How Terahertz Waves Tear Apart DNA - Friday, October 30, 2009.

A new model of the way the THz waves interact with DNA explains how the damage is done and why evidence has been so hard to gather.
The Link: http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/24331/
02:27 PM on 01/13/2010
The Constitution and Freedom…preserve and protect them!

1787 - Philadelphia’s Hot Summer.

The Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q9kM6vWL2QA

The IRS and the FEDERAL RESERVE is a FRAUD.
12:32 PM on 01/13/2010
Michelle Obama's Nude Body Scan by Airport Security.

The Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TdUxW3UFAwM
05:43 PM on 01/11/2010
I see a huge underground PORNOGRAPHY business "taking off" here soon, thanks to this unique technology, provided by the CORPORATIONS and GROUPS who thought that we must have FULL BODY SCANS.

Body scanners can store, send images, group says.

January 11, 2010

A privacy group says the Transportation Security Administration is misleading the public with claims that full-body scanners at airports cannot store or send their graphic images.

The TSA specified in 2008 documents that the machines must have image storage and sending abilities, the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) said.

In the documents, obtained by the privacy group and provided to CNN, the TSA specifies that the body scanners it purchases must have the ability to store and send images when in "test mode."
http://www.cnn.com/2010/TRAVEL/01/11/body.scanne rs/index.html

More on BODY SCANNERS...

Airport Body Scanner Image Shows NAKED Bodies In Full Living COLOR!

DO NOT ENTER ONE OF THESE BODY SCANNERS AT THE AIRPORT. THEY MAY FORCE YOU BUT IT IS NOT MANDATORY. KNOW YOUR RIGHTS.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LY0BJIu0o0s
10:38 PM on 01/10/2010
Welcome to the new Amerika!

United States (US) to use drones
on their own citizens

Houston, USA - The police plan to use unmanned drones with "high powered cameras" to spy on the American people. The cameras can look into people's houses, their backyards and even track people or vehicles. The drones can stay in air for up to 24hours.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4WKYx3UOow
10:26 PM on 01/10/2010
Yemen. Strategically Correct -The Whole Story.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPMdRhKmc4Y
10:25 PM on 01/10/2010
Chertoff and Company - The Cover Up (Body Scanners).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pagc4O47MSw&f eature=fvsr
photo
armywifee
From the Soviet Republic of Canuckistan
11:33 PM on 01/06/2010
If you want to get on the public bus you have to ~prove~ that you do not intend to blow up the public bus.

Oh there I go being all hardcore again.
03:56 PM on 12/30/2009
Was Detroit Jet “TERRORIST ATTACK” staged?

The recent failed attack on a US passenger jet traveling from Amsterdam to Detroit was a set-up provocation, controlled by US intelligence...author and journalist Webster Tarpley, stated to RT.

“[The terrorist’s] father, a rich Nigerian banker, went to the US embassy in Nigeria, on November 19 and said; ‘my son is in Yemen in a terrorist camp, do something about this.’ Nevertheless, the son is allowed to buy a ticket in Ghana, paying cash, $2,800 for a one-way ticket” Tarpley said.
http://rt.com/Best_Videos/2009-12-29/detroit-terror-act-fake.html
03:05 PM on 12/30/2009
The elephant in the room is the radiation exposure. Sure, they say its small but what if a woman is a few days pregnant and does not know. What about the exposure of a little radiation to the eggs of any female? One of those irradiated eggs may become a child many years down the road. Who is to say that having a 6 year old girl go through one full body scan isn't causing DNA damage to her future children? We put a lead apron on any female throughout her life; why is this any different?

A woman who is pregnant with a female fetus is exposing her grandchildren (via the eggs that already exist in the fetus) to that radiation. This is science, not science fiction.

Also, what about a man who flies home one afternoon and makes a baby with his wife that night?

Are you willing to take that risk with your health and the health of your children and grandchildren?
08:56 PM on 01/10/2010
The greater risk is probably to frequent travelers that would undergo multiple exposures. How are those frequent fliers going to be compensated when they develop cancers and their children are born with deformities years from now?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter Noble 2
03:01 PM on 12/30/2009
The pictures I've seen from the scanners are not remotely invasive. It might show some contours but really I think most members of Congress who objected to these scans are concerned their "members" might not be big enough to show up on the scan. We might find out that they need to grow a pair but we already know that.
10:50 AM on 12/30/2009
Computerized Axial Tomography.

December 14, 2009

CAT scans deliver far more radiation than has been believed, and may contribute to 29,000 new cancers each year, along with 14,500 deaths, suggest two studies in today's Archives of Internal Medicine. One study, led by the National Cancer Institute's Amy Berrington de Gonzalez, used existing exposure data to estimate how many cancers might be caused by CT scans.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-12-15-radiation15_st_N.htm

U.S. student sleuths use unique Cdn technology to identify mislabelled foods.

December 28, 2009

From mislabeled fish, to cow's milk; being passed off as pricey sheep's milk.

Brenda Tan and Matt Cost of Trinity School in Manhattan gathered about 150 DNA samples from foods and objects in their homes and neighbourhood as part of a science project with Rockefeller University and the American Museum of Natural History.

Tan said; they found that 11 of the 66 fish prepackaged and, other food products bought largely at neighbourhood markets, were mislabelled.
http://www.macleans.ca/article.jsp?content=n021525219
09:49 AM on 12/30/2009
I don't think they have done enough research on the machines to prove that they are safe. If someone is exposed to this machine too many times, the radiology may have harmful effects.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
popart
retired school teacher
12:41 AM on 12/30/2009
there are so many targets in the world and so few terrorists that the odds of anyone dying by the hand of a terorist is zero......it is silly that we are so frightened by something so trivial....what we should worry about is the millionsof deaths caused by genicide,starvation,disease, violent crime and wars.....