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Object Lessons: Evan Booth's Post-Checkpoint Airport Weapons

Jah-Wren Ryel writes "In early-2013, independent security researcher, Evan 'treefort' Booth, began working to answer one simple question: Can common items sold in airports after the security screening be used to build lethal weapons? As it turns out, even a marginally 'MacGyver-esque' attacker can breeze through terminal gift shops, restaurants, magazine stands and duty-free shops to find everything needed to wage war on an airplane." We mentioned Evan's work several months back; now his not-just-a-thought-experiment exploration of improvised weapons has been cleaned up and organized, so you don't have to watch his (fascinating) talks to experience the wonders of the Chucks of Liberty (video) or the Fragguccino (video).

2 of 208 comments (clear)

  1. Re: So, time to scrap TSA/airport security checks by myowntrueself · · Score: 4, Funny

    High jacking was much easier then. The door to the cockpit was not locked and secured.

    Apples. Oranges.

    And don't forget the different politic climate and the different goals of the high jackers.

    In a nutshell you can't derive potential high jacking cases from the past.

    Really it was the crackdown on drugs on airplanes that put paid to the high jackers. Now the best they can manage are drunk jackers.

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  2. Re:So, time to scrap TSA/airport security checks by gomiam · · Score: 3, Funny

    In a democracy the elected member of the government are expandable.

    They are usually quite inflated on their own, I don't think they are that expandable.