> >Some day in the future, maybe a year from now, you may have a "trusted >traveler" card. Congress wants it, the airlines need it and security >experts endorse it. > >The benefits appear clear. With a tool to separate the wheat from the
So does an attack. Befriend someone with such a card, give her a gift with well hidden, unscented plastique and a barometric detonator. After some time she takes her planned flight and gets only a cursory exam. She neglects to mention the gift she's carrying (they don't even ask the 2 security questions reliably, any more, anyway). It worked over Lockerbie, it'll work again. The Lockerbie carrier had the equivalent of a "trusted traveller" card --she was a white woman. --------------------------------------------------------------------- The Cryptography Mailing List Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe cryptography" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
