Full body scans for US bound flights

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Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport is implementing full body scans for all passengers on US-bound flights, as confirmed by Dutch Interior Minister Guusje ter Horst. The millimeter-wave body scanners will be operational within three weeks and will replace traditional body searches for those not scanned. The discussion highlights concerns regarding privacy versus security, with participants expressing varying opinions on the necessity and implications of such technology. The consensus leans towards prioritizing safety over privacy, despite acknowledging the potential for misuse and privacy violations.

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http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/12/30/airline.terror.schiphol/index.html"

Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport will start using full body scans for US bound flights. I remember seeing this technology in its early stages a few years ago and remember the privacy issues. I am glad to see it actually going into use. I think they should have it at all airports and use it at random, kind of like the pre-boarding searches. The people that are agaisnt it because of the privacy issues would be very unhappy if all the airports suddenly switched to this technology, the random searches would be a good starting point. I am all for every airport using it. I value my safety more than my privacy.
 
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tmyer2107 said:
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/12/30/airline.terror.schiphol/index.html"

Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport will start using full body scans for US bound flights. I remember seeing this technology in its early stages a few years ago and remember the privacy issues. I am glad to see it actually going into use. I think they should have it at all airports and use it at random, kind of like the pre-boarding searches. The people that are agaisnt it because of the privacy issues would be very unhappy if all the airports suddenly switched to this technology, the random searches would be a good starting point. I am all for every airport using it.
It may be necessary, but I am not 'glad' that this is so.

I value my safety more than my privacy.
Keep up that policy for too long and we may end up loosing both.
 
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Great, so now underwear bombers know to fly out of Paris or London instead of Amsterdam :rolleyes:.
 
mheslep said:
Keep up that policy for too long and we may end up loosing both.

True, I should have been more precise in my statement. I don't want this discussion to spin off into privacy issues related to the patriot act, etc. I just don't mind going through a full body scanner in an airport. It is clear that the explosives the terrorists are going to use will not be picked up by our current methods.
 
The ultimate solution: eliminate all carry-on baggage, make all airline passengers check in all their baggage and clothing, and fly in the nude. :rolleyes:
 
jtbell said:
The ultimate solution: eliminate all carry-on baggage, make all airline passengers check in all their baggage and clothing, and fly in the nude. :rolleyes:

...because getting stuck in a middle seat between two fully-clothed large people isn't bad enough.
 
jtbell said:
The ultimate solution: eliminate all carry-on baggage, make all airline passengers check in all their baggage and clothing, and fly in the nude. :rolleyes:
That still leaves the possibility of using implanted or internal explosives.

What we need is incorporeal transportation.

As the Moody Blues sang "See with your mind, leave your body behind" (from Sun Is Still Shining, To Our Children's Children's Children) :biggrin:
 
Greg Bernhardt said:
Will they scan children?

Thats a good question. I'm assuming the answer is yes since it says all passengers will be scanned.
 
  • #10
.. in addition all passengers will be thoroughly padded down by security personnel. I find a body search more intrusive than a scan that is only judged by computer software.
 
  • #11
From the article

The millimeter-wave body scanners will be in place in about three weeks, Dutch Interior Minister Guusje ter Horst told a news conference at The Hague.


The scanners will be permanent at Schiphol, and any passengers bound for the United States who do not go through them will be bodysearched, ter Horst said.

mm-wave implier IR, i.e. thermal imaging, which perhaps is passive, as opposed to active/invasive scanning, e.g., x-ray or neutron radiography.
 
  • #12
I misread, the coming three weeks all passengers will be bodysearched (including the crotch, so be warned :smile:), after that everyone will go through the scan.
 
  • #13
I have nothing to hide! :biggrin:

or nothing but hide. :smile:
 
  • #14
Perhaps we should allow for separate planes for those that don't want to be scanned?
 
  • #15
Astronuc said:
mm-wave implier IR, i.e. thermal imaging, which perhaps is passive, as opposed to active/invasive scanning, e.g., x-ray or neutron radiography.

No, the systems are probably active (there is a radiation source). Most of them are based around far-IR (a few THz) so it is not really thermal imaging in the usual sense.
And no, they will not detect explosives, it is basically a camera that can see through most fabrics but it is till possible to hide explosives.
There are techniques for spectroscopy in the THz range that can detect the "fingerprint" of some explosives but they are still being developed and won't be ready for deployment for a number of years,
 
  • #16
Monique said:
(including the crotch, so be warned :smile:)

depending on the agent, I may opt to go through security a few times just to be sure! :biggrin:
 
  • #17
I'm not sure that a THz scan is any more intrusive from a privacy standpoint than X-ray scans of your luggage, or asking for your personal information when you buy the ticket, or randomly searching your luggage.

So the agents see you "nude," do we really have to be so prude about it?
 
  • #18
Mech_Engineer said:
So the agents see you "nude," do we really have to be so prude about it?

I wouldn't want an agent looking at my 6 year old daughter or son!
 
  • #19
Perhaps, but is that because you feel they are possible sex offenders or something? WHY don't you want an official looking at your child with a THz machine?

I've actually flown through Schiphol, and more intrusive than these proposed body scans is the pre-boarding interview I had to go through where a security agent asks you questions about where you're coming from, where you're going, why you're going there, how long you plan to stay, etc. Granted this was a while ago (2004) but I couldn't help but feel like I had be careful about what I divulged to the agent...
 
  • #20
tmyer2107 said:
True, I should have been more precise in my statement. I don't want this discussion to spin off into privacy issues related to the patriot act, etc.
How can thread on full body scans not involved privacy issues?
 
  • #21
Mech_Engineer said:
I'm not sure that a THz scan is any more intrusive from a privacy standpoint than X-ray scans of your luggage, or asking for your personal information when you buy the ticket, or randomly searching your luggage.
Of course it is

So the agents see you "nude," do we really have to be so prude about it?
I predict those mm wave photos will, for famous travellers, begin appearing on the web, a gross privacy violation. There is just too much lurid value placed on such to avoid it.

For every grandmother subjected to this intrusive scan or disallowed a carry on or restricted from moving in the last hour of the flight, ten thousand young males from Nigeria or Arab young male traveling with no return ticket and no checked bags from the middle east should be body searched first, and then we can discuss prudishness about profiling.
 
  • #22
Greg Bernhardt said:
Will they scan children?
It's likely.

Years back, I was on a flight out of Bangor and there was a young couple behind me with a baby in a carrier. They acted a bit flustered and rushed, hunting for "misplaced" boarding passes, etc, and passing the baby back and forth. The man had already gone through the metal detector and his wife passed the baby (in the carrier) to him so she could rummage through her purse. Luckily, the security lady manning the X-ray machine had enough brains to have seen a violation of procedure, and she insisted that the man take the baby out of the carrier and hand it back to his wife, who allowed it to be put through the X-ray. Suddenly, a supervisor appeared out of nowhere, and the lady had him look at the X-ray display - she didn't shield the screen very well and I had gotten around to where I could clearly see the shape of a gun. The man and woman went off with the supervisor and a couple of security guards, and soon after, they boarded the flight - I assumed they were air marshals, testing security.

Babies, toddlers, etc can be very useful distractions.
 
  • #23
There are also lots of things that you can hide in diapers.

I wonder how the scans react to jewelry and buttons/zippers? Will it cause the scans to be flagged for human inspection? (which would be pretty much the case for every person)
 
  • #24
this is (one reason) why I will NEVER fly anymore
bio cards managed by the credit companies
aircraft maintainence done "out of country"
breaking of most professional unions.

the "puffer" can detect not only explosives, hydrocarbons, narcotics, but ANYTHING you want to program into it. If you shoot fireworks off with your kids sunday nite, you will test positive monday morning, regardless of scrubbing.

if the road don't get there, I ain't goin'
(after 13 years of travel I actually have anxiety attacks on the plane now)
what did me in was staring at a loose bolt on the wing in the slipstream for 3 1/2 hours then telling the crew and being told ok sir we'll fix it
yea right...ya didn't even ask which bolt!

dr
 
  • #25
Will they start checking airside ground crew?
So they do THz full body imaging of every passenger, take butter knives off pilots (and confiscate sharp pointy medals from generals)
And yet they allow trucks from catering, fueling, freight companies to drive in with only a cursory check of an ID card.
 
  • #26
mheslep said:
How can thread on full body scans not involved privacy issues?

It does involve privacy issues. My point was just that I wanted the thread to stay focused on the privacy issues related to the body scans alone, not spin off to a thread about privacy vs security in other areas including the patriot act.
 
  • #27
mgb_phys said:
Will they start checking airside ground crew?
So they do THz full body imaging of every passenger, take butter knives off pilots (and confiscate sharp pointy medals from generals)
And yet they allow trucks from catering, fueling, freight companies to drive in with only a cursory check of an ID card.
A Dutch journalist was able to go in and out of the airport on a fake ID card. He was able to bring a fake bomb and was even able to enter the airplane of the Queen, which was parked in one of the hangars for servicing. This means that the security for the outside personnel has been tightened.

I think the weakest point is that the US is not concerned about its inland air traffic. It is the countries that fly passengers into the US that are required to up the security, which means that only those countries need to invest a lot of money. People with ill intend will find another airport from which to fly, this definitely is not a watertight measure.
 
  • #28
I flew out of Curacao twice.
the "metal detector" was a very nice wood fake complete with power chord
would never have known the difference, except the fake readout sticker on the top was peeling, and the "lights" never changed
overseas and Canadian security is a joke

dr
 
  • #29
dr dodge said:
overseas and Canadian security is a joke

dr
Isn't that a gross prejudice/simplification :rolleyes:

I probably shouldn't even bite, but it was interesting that I've had security booths go off in Italian airports, while the ones in the States remained quiet. It turned out that there was metal in my shoe soles.
 
  • #30
As long as one doesn't let reality make a pre-selection of targets that should be fully scanned, this will be an extermely costly, and worthless effort.

We all KNOW which sub-population SHOULD be singled out as the most likely source of terrorists, and hence, which it is entirely appropriate to burden with discriminatory rules regarding safety regulations.
 

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