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First, it was probably not TSA, but a private contractor that examined your ID, so in this case you really can't blame the TSA.
Of course the TSA is at fault, as the contractor would be operating under a contract from the TSA. The TSA is ultimatley accountable for the performance of thier subcontractors. When CO loses your luggage, even though the majority of it's baggage handling is contracted out, CO is still accountable. Exact same thing here. |
Originally Posted by formeraa
(Post 7021204)
....., uniformed TSA (yes, real TSA agents) were checking ID's. I was VERY surprised, but assumed that they had intelligence .......
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Originally Posted by mwarden
(Post 7027216)
Secondly, boarding passes are not a security mechanism. I can print out a boarding pass with any name I want, simply by modifying the text in the HTML of the OLCI boarding pass.
There was even a site created by a computer security grad student that would let you print out fake NW boarding passes. He did it to raise awareness of how useless BP checking is for a security measure. It's just another scene in airport security theater. As for the original topic, I'm my parents' kid :D and I've checked them in online for their flights several times in the past. Usually because I'm their "TA" and book the tickets through my account, so it's just easier. |
Originally Posted by Seat13c
(Post 7020645)
First off, that's not what the security personnel told me. Its posted that it is required to get through security.
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This belongs in the Travel Safety & Security forum.
Xyzzy CO forum moderator |
Originally Posted by ryerflyer
(Post 7027293)
Of course the TSA is at fault, as the contractor would be operating under a contract from the TSA. The TSA is ultimatley accountable for the performance of thier subcontractors.
When CO loses your luggage, even though the majority of it's baggage handling is contracted out, CO is still accountable. Exact same thing here. |
Originally Posted by Seat13c
(Post 7020645)
but are you saying that the name on the boarding pass is a mute point? Can I fly on just anyone's boarding pass?
The boarding pass and id checks are examples of the "appearance of security" and not actually effective security measures. There are several ways of looking at systematic errors. First is the "design error" element. In other words -- if implemented perfectly -- is a particular security measure designed to achieve a specific result. The boarding pass is an unsecure document, and as such susceptible to effective forgery even by amatuers. Driver's licenses and other forms of government-issued photo id are a bit more effort, but routinely achievable by high school football players across the country. However, even assuming the ID is not forged and the boarding pass is not forged, they are only useful in potentially identifying identity after a security breach has taken place. Second, is the "operator error" element. In other words, you can have the absolute most theoretically effective tool, but if the person performing the task does not perform it correctly, then the process is a failure. In this case, you take a process with ample design flaws and complicate it with the kind of operator error you experienced. From a statistics perspective, its a multiplicative situation. So if you start with a flawed design and combine it with inattentive personnel, it's fairly easy to reach the point where the mere toss of coin is a more effective security screening procedure. |
Originally Posted by Seat13c
(Post 7024622)
Are we any more safe than we were more safe than before 9/11? I doubt it. The only thing that's come out of it is that we better medal and x-ray machines on the upside, but more obvious loop holes and longer lines on the down side.
But what has happened is that the list of prohibited items has so greatly expanded from toothpaste to water to pocket knives that it becomes much more difficult for the screeners to find the items that really matter (e.g. EWR's 90%+ failure rate in a test that was leaked). If I ask you to look for just three items when you are screening, you will be much more likely to find them than if I ask you to look for 100 items of which those three are a part. It is just the way our minds work. As such, the items that really matter (guns and explosives) are more likely to be missed now than they were before IMHO. Where we are better off post-9/11 is that we now have hardened cockpit doors and a different approach to how we deal with hijackers. Flight 93 is an example of that. If those passengers were forewarned earlier, they might have been able to prevent the hijacking. As it was, they did prevent the hijackers from destroying their intended target. So are we better? I think yes, but in spite of TSA screening points. |
Originally Posted by ND Sol
(Post 7030767)
I would posit that the screening checkpoints are actually worse in preventing the next hijacking than they were pre-9/11. ...
There's a fair amount of math and industrial job design/psychology you could use to analyze it. But the logic you laid out gets to a big part of the problem. Given a relatively constant inspection time, the greater the number and variety of items you look for, the greater the likelihood that at least one of those prohibited items will pass thru undetected. In plain language, it's a choice between doing a few jobs well and large number of jobs poorly. Toss into that the mind-numbing randomness and number of truly trivial changes. The result is a flawed process which -- even if perfect -- is almost certainly to be misapplied by under skilled, undertrained, undermotivated and understaffed personnel. Which just reinforces what I have said before: The TSA is a political solution, not a security solution. |
Originally Posted by hughw
(Post 7020137)
There was an interesting (and amusing) article on the New York Times OpEd page this morning regarding a security breach on a CO flight at EWR. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/15/op...=1&oref=slogin
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