JFK And LAX Get Scanners That See Through Clothes
Despite privacy concerns, TSA says 90% of passengers who are subject to secondary screening opt for a millimeter wave scan over a pat down.
The Transportation Security Administration on Friday said that it’s beginning new pilot tests of millimeter wave scanning technology at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) and John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK).
Millimeter wave scanners allow TSA personnel to see concealed weapons and other items that may be hidden beneath clothes.
When the first TSA pilot test of the technology began in October at Phoenix Sky-Harbor International Airport, TSA Administrator Kip Hawley said that agency was committed to protecting passenger privacy and that the potentially revealing body scans would not be stored.
At the time, Barry Steinhardt, director of the ACLU’s technology and liberty program, warned that the “strikingly graphic images of passengers’ bodies” were an assault on personal dignity and expressed doubt about TSA’s ability to safeguard the images.
Such concerns seem all the more reasonable given the government’s inability to prevent State Department employees from inappropriately accessing the passport files of presidential candidates Hillary Clinton, John McCain, and Barack Obama.
Full Story Via InformationWeek
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