WASHINGTON — For the first time, some airline passengers will skip metal detectors and instead be screened by body scanning machines that look through clothing for hidden weapons, the Transportation Security Administration said Tuesday. An experimental program that begins today at Tulsa International Airport will test whether the $170,000 body scanners could replace $10,000 metal detectors that have screened airline passengers since 1973. Airports in San Francisco, Las Vegas, Miami, Albuquerque and Salt Lake City will join the test in the next two months, TSA spokesman Christopher White said. The scanners aim to close a loophole by finding non-metallic weapons such as plastic and liquid explosives, which the TSA considers a major threat. The machines raise privacy concerns because their images reveal outlines of private body parts. ‘We’re getting closer and closer to a required strip-search to board an airplane,’ said Barry Steinhardt of the American Civil Liberties Union. Privacy advocate Melissa Ngo fears that passengers won’t understand that the scanners take vivid images that screeners view. FIND MORE STORIES IN: San Francisco | Miami | Las Vegas | Salt Lake City | Transportation Security Administration | American Civil Liberties Union | Albuquerque | Homeland Security […]
Thursday, February 19th, 2009
Body Scanners Replace Metal Detectors in Tryout at Tulsa Airport
Author: THOMAS FRANK
Source: USA TODAY
Publication Date: 18-Feb-09
Link: Body Scanners Replace Metal Detectors in Tryout at Tulsa Airport
Source: USA TODAY
Publication Date: 18-Feb-09
Link: Body Scanners Replace Metal Detectors in Tryout at Tulsa Airport
Stephan: It is becoming less and less pleasant to fly. It will be interesting to see how that trend, and the trend of increasing and more lifelike electronic interaction -- Skype, for instance -- will meld. And how this will, in turn, interact with the need to reduce a nation's carbon footprint. The three together I believe will make physical travel a declining trend.