DHS Passenger Scoring Almost Certainly Illegal
Vicissidude writes "At the National Targeting Center, the Automated Targeting System program harvests up to 50 fields of passenger data from international flights, including names, e-mail addresses and phone numbers, and uses watchlists, criminal databases and other government systems to assign risk scores to every passenger. When passengers deplane, Customs and Border Protection personnel then target the high scorers for extra screening. Data and the scores can be kept for 40 years, shared widely, and be used in hiring decisions. Travelers may neither see nor contest their scores. The ATS program appears to fly in the face of legal requirements Congress has placed in the Homeland Security appropriations bills for the last three years." From the article: "Marc Rotenberg, the director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said he was unaware of the language but that it clearly applies to the Automated Targeting System, not just Secure Flight, the delayed successor to CAPPS II. 'Bingo, that's it -- the program is unlawful,' Rotenberg said. 'I think 514(e) stands apart logically (from the other provisions) and 514 says the restrictions apply to any 'other follow-on or successor passenger prescreening program'. It would be very hard to argue that ATS as applied to travelers is not of the kind contemplated (by the lawmakers).'"
When passengers deplane, Customs and Border Protection personnel then target the high scorers for extra screeningDone. Now give me my $50,000 lawyer fee.
I hope that the new Congress will put its foot down on yet another intrusion into American personal liberty. The old one -- even the Democratic members -- did not.
This passenger scoring thing denies rights based on a secret law. Making it impossible for a citizen to know what actions may result in the loss of these rights. A perfectly law abiding citizen who happens to dress a certain way and prefer a certain food (all in compliance with law) can get denied the ability to fly, whereas as people who have served time for multiple felonies are allowed on planes (not that they shouldn't be allowed either).
WTF.
For Hireing?
It is publicly available or is it only available to the government?
See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
Until they start sending people with a score that is too high to secret prisons without the right to know why they are being charged or the evidence that is being used to convict them. All of this crap is getting way out of control.
GENERATION 27: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
if you use a fake boarding pass :-)
Support NYCountryLawyer RIAA vs People
Would it be illegal to mention that this article appears to be a dupe from a few days ago? Or would that affect my terrorist (karma) score? :P
Where is it that you guys are getting the idea that the rule of law applies to this administration? That wouldn't be in their interests at all. And since they're in charge of enforcing the laws they break...
And if you think that Congress, aside from a couple of freaks like Feingold and Leahy, are going to do anything about this at all... well, I hope you're right, but I'd bet against it.
PS: I like those freaks. I wish they weren't the exception.
It sounds like a slightly modified spam-assassin with baysian filtering.
From the article:
Paul Rosenzweig, a high-level Homeland Security official, told Congress in September that the system had "encountered 4801 positive matches for known or suspected terrorists." However, it is unclear how many of those were correct matches.
No, it's very clear. Zero. Zilch, none, nada. If there were any correct matches, they would trot them out and use them to demonstrate the "success" of the program.
Unreliable, I usually use email address hosted other countries.
:)
We should all book our tickets using emails from country comains that they consider in their axis of evil
Make a mockary of their system, jam it with so much noise it is useless.
I think some sort of new check and balance needs to be put in place against the executive branch. We're supposed to have the Congress and the Supreme Court to protect us from potential abuses, but they haven't obviously served us very well in the past 6 years...
What we need, I'm not sure. But we need something.
-B
Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.
When will you see that was used to be the land of the free suddenly has become what Orwell predicted, although he was off by some 20 years.
I'd say that at this point Osama is getting what he was after in the first case, to destroy the westerners "paradise".
it should be used for Netflix or Slashdot instead.
I haven't set foot in an airport since this insanity began, and I refuse to do so until this insanity ends.
Traveling by bus, train, or car is not as fast or comfortable, but at least you can do it with some of your privacy intact.
Just say no.
The one bright spot to all of this is that starting next year, you'll be able to log into www.FreeTerrorReport.com and get a free copy of your score from all three of the main terror bureaus.
We're going down, in a spiral to the ground
translates into definitely legal. "Might" and "possible" placed together encompasses everything that everything that is not.
One of my pet peeves is the word "deplane". It is NOT deplane, it is DISEMBARK!!!
Jesus, when did the airlines have such a low opinion of their passengers that they think that they don't know what disembark means?
Seriously, deplane? Sound more like delouse. AAAAAHHHHH, get these planes off me!!!
Data and the scores can be kept for 40 years, shared widely, and be used in hiring decisions but the traveler is not allowed to see it? Why would a prospective employer have access to this info but the prospective employee can't? They can say "we can't hire you because something showed up in your file but we can't tell you what it is". This has got to be bullshit if anything is.
otherwise fully willing to render his purported expert opinion on the legality of something he admits he was unaware of.
Not that such ignorance prevented the reporter from quoting him, or prevented Slashdot from posting this.
It seems to me that we all want to be kept safe from terrorist attacks but are unwilling to allow profiling. I can't help but believe that if you use profiling you will be getting better results with the limited resources you have. The fact is that ALL of the 9/11 terrorists were radical Muslims. How does it help to pretend that this isn't so? I'm not being prejudice just realistic. If there were a militant hristian movement complete with suicide bombers I would hope that for my safety Christians would be profiled.
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
The purported expert quoted in the article appears unaware that CAPPS and SecureFlight applied to domestic US flights. Those programs are accordingly more restricted - and subject to things like the "Section 514" mentioned. This program relates only to International Flights and thus has a whole different set of rules (unless I missed the imposition of Customs checks on domestic flights).
Once again ignorance is no bar to blanket assertions of illegal acts.
Yes, but how many of the Oklahoma City terrorists were Muslims? How many of the abortion clinic bombing terrorists were Muslims? How many of the Columbine terrorists were Muslims?
Ben Hocking
Need a professional organizer?
Wait, so let me get this straight...
The Department of Homeland Security actually wrote something that would PRESERVE our Constitutional rights?!?!
Who are you and what have you done with our fascist overlords?
"It's not whether you win or lose, it's how drunk you get." -- H. J. Simpson
The link in the Wired New story is broken -- Regulations.gov doesn't use static URL's for individual documents.
l er-is-a-target/
The Identity Project comments, including as an appendix the text of the relevant law, are at:
http://hasbrouck.org/IDP/IDP-ATS-comments.pdf
Those comments also expain how the "Automated Targeting System" would include information on domestic flights and travelers, in addition to international travel records.
There's more background on my blog, and the Identity Project blog:
http://hasbrouck.org/blog/archives/001184.html
http://papersplease.org/wp/2006/12/05/every-trave
Call me a racist, I could care less..... When 80 year old grandmas start blowing up buildings by flying airplanes into them, I'll start looking at 80 year old grandmas. Until then, the PATTERN has been since the 70's, 20-40 year old MUSLIM males causing all the problems, so you LOOK at those causing the problem. It isn't "profiling", it's called common sense!
I really hate to admit it, but I think you're quite right. And if they are actually good people, and not evil destroyers, then they should also agree to wearing a big yellow crescent moon badge on their outer garments so that everyone knows that they are not to be mistaken for the "bad muslims." It's for their own good you know... else they might get shot by mistake or something.
But then, you know, there are Americans out there, not me and not you of course, that can't tell the difference between a good muslim and a bad muslim, badge or no badge. So in the interests of their safety, we should ask them to move to an enclosed, all-muslim collective zone until we can get this war on terror sorted out. It's really the only way to prevent tragedy from befalling the good muslims after all.
I think the whole nation has lost its mind. The two paragaphs above this are complete bull-crap. I think the parallels to history are pretty obvious and it should be obvious to all why it's wrong. I think our society would be far better off if we kept ALL of our freedoms in-tact and let the "terrorists" do their worst. I think our freedom is worth it. And yes, even if it means there would be increased possibility of my own children being killed. (Because as far as I can see, there would STILL be a higher probablility of death on the freeway or death by rampaging teenager in school than death by terrorist attack.) Let's take a clue from other nations that have been dealing with radical violence for decades or longer. Let's just go on about our lives and let the police do their jobs with the tools they already have. It's good enough if they aren't lazy worthles pigs.
DHS has received a whopping 59 comments about the system before the December 4th deadline and so they extended the deadline for comments to Dec 29th. Details are in this WIRED article
Some people have a way with words, and some people, um, thingy.
Good point. Where do folks get the idea that blame applies only to the Administration? Last I checked, the "Other Branch" that was supposed to balance (Congress) rolled over.
"Hey, all of this monitoring stuff the bureaucracy's lusted for for years sounds like a great idea".
Now supposedly Congress is going to grow a set? I'll believe it when I see it. They won't give a damn until this is used against one of them as a political tactic (not if, when).
"Give a woman two glasses of wine and some pad thai, and they'll agree to just about anything." the Sports Guy
the first two paragraphs may be with tongue firmly in cheek, but there are way too many people who not only fail to spot the historical parallel, but will think it is a Good Idea.
On the bright side, my amulet protecting me from terrorists seems to work - since I bought it, I haven't been killed by a terrorist. Maybe I should sell it to the president, so that he can save billions by dissolving the TSA and DHS
"She's furniture with a pulse"
I know 6 Imans who ought to be scoring pretty high on this list right about now.
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
The first two paragraphs actually describe how Iran currently operates but just substitute Muslim for Christian.
Not knowing what DHS is (I'm not an oppressed American), the headline read like:
a) DHS is an airline (or similar),
b) one of their passengers got lucky, but
c) they got busted.
Every amendment in the Constitution deals with what Congress shall or Congress shall not do. Like it or not, but flying is not a right and the Constitution does not apply to airlines. Every citizen if free to vote with their pocket books and take the bus, boat or rail.
There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
...but your terror score will cost $9.95.
"How to Do Nothing," kids activities, back in print!
But wouldn't it make more sense to give those high scorers extra screening before they got on the plane?
My fantasy of the U.S. becoming more and more like the Minority Report utopia is being foiled by pesky civil-rights laws.
BTM
That was the turning point of my life--I went from negative zero to positive zero.
Just to argue the logic and not the politics (because I'm certain neither of us will budge on that), your logic is flawed. First of all, that 25 should be 19 (unless I'm missing 6 from somewhere, which I'll admit is possible). So, we'll just let both numbers be 19. (If I really wanted to, I could come up with scores of "Columbinish" events, including one that happened at a school where I used to teach, but I won't go there.) As I'll try to explain, the denominator in the first paragraph is irrelevant for your profile rate in the second paragraph. If there are 100 times more "Whities" than "Muzzies" (gak!), then if you search one W for each one (not 100) M, then you'll be targeting them 100 times as much (since there are 1/100th as many to search). If you searched 100 M's for every 1 W (as you suggest), then you are targeting them 10,000 times as much despite your assertion that they are only 100 times more likely to be a terrorist.
Then, of course, there's the problem of identifying M's. Are we going to use crescent armbands or something? (Does that count towards Godwin?).
Ben Hocking
Need a professional organizer?
I see a pattern of 20-40 year old CHRISTIAN males engaging in terrorism too. can we profile you too?
I said we should argue the logic (i.e., the lack of meaning in the denominators) rather than the politics since we definitely won't agree on the politics (at least not completely). If there are X terrorists of type A, and Y terrorists of type B, then the proper sampling would be X/Y regardless of how many total people there are of types A and B - unless you have additional information that we didn't even discuss.
Here's the basic logic: let's assume you have the accurate P(T|A), where T=person is terrorist, and A=person is of type A, and P(T|B). In this case, we'll say (for sake of argument) that P(T|A) = 25/100,000,000 and P(T|B) = 25/1,000,000. I.e., P(T|A) = 0.01 * P(T|B). Now, let's assume that the probability of flying on an airplane is identical for groups A & B (i.e., I'm assuming no "a priori" information). That means that P(F|A) = P(F|B), where F=person is flying on a plane. Let's also assume (although I won't argue it) that P(F|A) is independent of P(T|A). This assumption of equality will mean that we won't actually need to use this probability.
Now, the question you're really trying to ask, when you're (sort of) asking what is the ratio of A to B that should be sampled is what is P(A|T) relative to P(B|T)? Now, Bayes' theorem tells us that P(A|T)P(T) = P(A,T) = P(T|A)P(A). Solving this for P(T) gives us P(T) = P(T|A)P(A)/P(A|T). By similar logic, P(T) = P(T|B)P(B)/P(B|T), so P(T|A)P(A)/P(A|T) = P(T|B)P(B)/P(B|T). Now, if we assume that the ratio of P(A)/P(B) = 100 (i.e., there are 100 times more A than B), and given our initial assumption that P(T|A)/P(T|B) = 0.01, we have that P(A|T) = P(B|T). I.e., for every A you search, you should search 1 (and not 100) B. Note: this means that you will be effectively sampling B at 100 times the rate of A.
Ben Hocking
Need a professional organizer?
As far as I know, this is not true ,i.e, Christians do not have to wear visible markers identifying them as such in Iran. Can you share the source of your information.
Thanks.
Linkage
From the link:
Earlier this month, EFF's FLAG Project submitted a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to DHS seeking more details about the ATS data-mining program, but the agency has not yet disclosed the requested information.
For EFF's full comments to DHS:
http://www.eff.org/Privacy/ats/ats_comments.pdf
For the DHS Federal Register notice announcing ATS:
http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2006/06-9026.htm
Oops, forgot the link:
3 0
http://www.eff.org/news/archives/2006_11.php#0050
and B) I hope you're familiar with the concept of over-generalization? I.e., you can't extract very much meaningfully predictive information from a single example.
Normally, I'd be happy to argue the actual politics with you (rather than just the logic), but I know it would be fruitless (and that's not intended to be an insult in any way - it's admittedly fruitless in both directions), and I'm a little tired.
Not that I really expect the logic/math argument to be that much more successful... :)
Ben Hocking
Need a professional organizer?
Mod parent up!
:)
Silly moderators don't understand a good pun when the see it.
Have you read my journal today?
"Deplane"? Dear God. The word they are struggling for is "disembark".
That's what I always thought... Hmmm.. Strange how these things turn out to be differently named, but essentially the same.
Coz eternity my friend, is a long *ing time.
The simple fact that almost all terrorist actions stem from radical Islamic groups, and are conducted by Muslims, then profiling Muslims is fine by me. The sooner we rid the Earth of these life-hating savages, the better.
ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING the united states of america has done since 1999, flies in the face of legality and legal requirements ... including holding their SHAM elections ... (right, CHAD?) that's why I and other intelligent people no longer travel outside my country so those FASCISTS can NOT access much of my personal information ... NOTHING about me or my existence is any of their business, never has been, never will be ... repealing the bill of rights, destroying various amendments to the us constitution, introducing torture to the world theatre, raping the pockets of it's citizens to line the pockets of the elite (or Bushie's baseline as he calls them) creating the world's weapons industry, disrupting world peace in many countries, starting wars of empire, (right, ROMAN?), creating the illegal drug trade, kidnapping and extortion of foreign nationals, terrorism on a global scale ... I could go on, but you guys already know these things ... except the poor uneducated americans behind Big Brother's media blackouts ...
I wish people would wake up and realsise that society itself often does people in, but you don't hear it on the news. People burn out, become mentaly ill, or simply get laid off, and what happens to them? They often become homeless, facing a cruel cold society who dosen't give one iota of a rats ass about them, and have to face criminals and preadators. There are services toi help the homeless, right? They are laughably inadaquate. I'm sorry about the rant, but I hear all of this talk and BSing about homeland security, and how we need more and more security for this and that, when the social SAFETY net is in tatters, and the pathology of today's society is blinding to those who see.
Delta Airlines delayed my flight out of San Jose, supposedly because it was foggy in Atlanta. It's 5 hours away, plenty of time for a fog to lift, but whatever. They made me miss my connecting flight. I had to spend the night in Atlanta ($274). They won't reimburse me, because the delay was "due to weather".
So don't fly if it's foggy somewhere in the country. Especially don't fly Delta.
Boss, it's de plane!
What was the name of that show again? That's the only appropriate use I can think of. Or maybe it's the opposite of the verb "to plane" as used in carpentry. Instead of leveling a wooden surface, you gouge it and make it wavy.
We are the 198 proof..