Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Two Classes of Airport Contraband

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Two Classes of Airport Contraband

    This is a great little writeup. From Bruce Schenier's Crypto-Gram:

    Airport security found a jar of pasta sauce in my luggage last month. It was a 6-ounce jar, above the limit; the official confiscated it, because allowing it on the airplane with me would have been too dangerous. And to demonstrate how dangerous he really thought that jar was, he blithely tossed it in a nearby bin of similar liquid bottles and sent me on my way.

    There are two classes of contraband at airport security checkpoints: the class that will get you in trouble if you try to bring it on an airplane, and the class that will cheerily be taken away from you if you try to bring it on an airplane. This difference is important: Making security screeners confiscate anything from that second class is a waste of time. All it does is harm innocents; it doesn't stop terrorists at all.

    Let me explain. If you're caught at airport security with a bomb or a gun, the screeners aren't just going to take it away from you. They're going to call the police, and you're going to be stuck for a few hours answering a lot of awkward questions. You may be arrested, and you'll almost certainly miss your flight. At best, you're going to have a very unpleasant day.

    This is why articles about how screeners don't catch every -- or even a majority -- of guns and bombs that go through the checkpoints don't bother me. The screeners don't have to be perfect; they just have to be good enough. No terrorist is going to base his plot on getting a gun through airport security if there's a decent chance of getting caught, because the consequences of getting caught are too great.

    Contrast that with a terrorist plot that requires a 12-ounce bottle of liquid. There's no evidence that the London liquid bombers actually had a workable plot, but assume for the moment they did. If some copycat terrorists try to bring their liquid bomb through airport security and the screeners catch them -- like they caught me with my bottle of pasta sauce -- the terrorists can simply try again. They can try again and again. They can keep trying until they succeed. Because there are no consequences to trying and failing, the screeners have to be 100 percent effective. Even if they slip up one in a hundred times, the plot can succeed.

    The same is true for knitting needles, pocketknives, scissors, corkscrews, cigarette lighters and whatever else the airport screeners are confiscating this week. If there's no consequence to getting caught with it, then confiscating it only hurts innocent people. At best, it mildly annoys the terrorists.

    To fix this, airport security has to make a choice. If something is dangerous, treat it as dangerous and treat anyone who tries to bring it on as potentially dangerous. If it's not dangerous, then stop trying to keep it off airplanes. Trying to have it both ways just distracts the screeners from actually making us safer.

    This essay originally appeared on Wired.com.
    http://www.wired.com/politics/securi...tymatters_0918 or http://tinyurl.com/4m6vvj
    Last edited by Slimprofits; October 15, 2008, 07:38 AM.

  • #2
    Re: The Two Classes of Airport Contraband

    Originally posted by babbittd View Post
    This is a great little writeup. From Bruce Schenier's Crypto-Gram:

    -- the terrorists can simply try again. They can try again and again. They can keep trying until they succeed. Because there are no consequences to trying and failing,
    Not quite true -- there is a cost to trying again and again and again --namely time and money -- and yes the risk of a liquid bomb getting through is decreasing -- by quite a bit. So I think the premises of this article are not correct and what he is suggesting is not true.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: The Two Classes of Airport Contraband

      My experience flying in the US and reading those of many other people suggest that is that it not all that hard to get liquids by the screeners. The costs of lost time for those that are caught and a couple of hundred bucks for a plane ticket should be negligible to any serious group of plotters. At what cost (in terms of time and money and annoyance to paying customers) 100% security theatre on a plane? Seems to me the focus should be on achieving a 100% success rate at stopping the most credible of plots.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: The Two Classes of Airport Contraband

        Originally posted by babbittd View Post
        My experience flying in the US and reading those of many other people suggest that is that it not all that hard to get liquids by the screeners. The costs of lost time for those that are caught and a couple of hundred bucks for a plane ticket should be negligible to any serious group of plotters. At what cost (in terms of time and money and annoyance to paying customers) 100% security theatre on a plane? Seems to me the focus should be on achieving a 100% success rate at stopping the most credible of plots.
        When I got bodysearched for trying to carry on a baby fork I realized this system is more about the appearance of security than security itself. The 3 oz bottles of liquid BS is a perfect example. Hasn't anyone realized that if you combine the contents of several people's "liquids bags", you could end up with a fairly large quantity?

        Pre-9/11 security was too lax. A friend told me he used to regularly fly with his hunting knife in his pocket or carry-on. So it's good that we stopped allowing hunting knives. And these days passengers are no longer going to allow a plane to be commandeered and used as a missile. In fact, any hijacking from here on out will most certainly result in the death of the terrorists, killed either by the passengers or by a United 93 type struggle and crash, but certainly not having their demands met or crashing into a building.

        And I think it's time to let us wear our shoes again.

        Jimmy

        Comment

        Working...
        X