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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:00 pm 
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Midgen wrote:
I personally have had a nice pocket knife and a multi-tool confiscated by airport security. There is a 100% chance that I showed up at the airport that day with absolutely NO intention of causing mayhem. I just simply forgot that I had them in my laptop bag when I went through security.

I'm pretty sure that this explains the very large majority of the stuff on that wall.


The TSA themselves state exactly that (not about the wall specifically, but about confiscation of "weapons" in general).

As a side note, I'd say that putting up that "wall o' confiscation" is a vital aspect of the security theater, it's like a playbill listing the actors awards.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2012 7:57 pm 
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Vindicarre wrote:
Correlation does not imply causation. Just because two things occur together, does not mean that one caused the other. Lisa, in an attempt to explain to Homer his illogical belief, argues that as the presence of her rock is correlated with an absence of tigers, the former must have caused the latter.

You arguing that not having "regular terrorist incidents aboard aircraft is more than enough proof" that the TSA must have stopped the terrorist incidents is directly analogous to Homer arguing that as the Bear Patrol vans are correlated with an absence of bears, the former must have caused the latter.

I'll make it very clear:
Homer arguing that as the Bear Patrol vans are correlated with an absence of bears, the former must have caused the latter, is directly analogous to Diamondeye arguing that as the TSA presence is correlated with an absence of regular terrorist incidents aboard aircraft, the former must have caused the latter, is directly analogous to Lisa arguing that the presence of her rock is correlated with an absence of tigers, the former must have caused the latter.


Leaving aside the fact that you need to go to a Simpson's episode, the two situations are, again, not analagous.

The "Tiger rock" example does not work, because it relies on selecting a perfectly arbitrary object (a rock) and claiming it keeps away a completely arbitrary threat (a tiger, an animal not indigenous to the suburban U.S. where "The Simpsons" is set). In fact, Lisa's argument really doesn't work for the bear patrol van because bears clearly are present in that area, both in real life and the author fiat of the episode. If the outcome weren't governed by author fiat, Lisa could not, in fact, legitimately say that the lack of additional bears wandering into town was unrelated to the presence of the Bear Patrol, just as Homer could not, in fact, say it was the Bear Patrol that definitively kept the bears away. The likelyhood of a bear wandering into town is miniscule in the first place, but it is not possible to say that the bear patrol does not reduce it even further.

The reasons this does not apply to the TSA or my argument are twofold: 1) I have not argued the TSA is perfect in keeping terrorists from attacking aircraft; indeed I have agreed that it could be better. 2) Terrorists are not bears. A bear wandering into town is a random event; it's a wild animal behaving in an out-of-the-norm fashion (aside from certain places in Alaska where it does happen on a regular basis, and with the polar bear, an animal that is dangerous to humans).

For one thing, if we were to transport your Simpsons episode to Alaska and the characters were to do something more practical such as building a wall to keep out polar bears, you would not be arguing that the wall does not keep bears out and using an analogy that relies on the fact that tigers do not live in Alaska to demonstrate it; you would need to demonstrate that the bears could climb the wall, break down the wall, or open the gate in the wall, and even then you would need to show that the reduction in bear intrusions was not commeasurate with the expense of the wall. You also would not be trying to argue that the wall is security theater because one bear every 5 years got through it, where before 10 bears a year wandered through town and occasionally mauled a resident.

Similarly, terrorists do not simply happen upon airplanes at random and decide to attack them for the sheer hell of it. They purposefully target aircraft for hijackings both because of the ready availability of hostages and since 9/11 potential use as a weapon in itself.

In order to make your Tiger analogy work you would need to demonstrate that terrorists either A) no longer exist, or no longer exist in meaningful numbers or B) no longer have any significant desire to target aircraft, and if the latter you would need to show that it was utterly, or at least very largely, unrelated to security precautions.

You have given no other logical explanation for the fact that terrorists seem to have moved on to other modus operandi, such as fighting as insurgents in Afghanistan or until recently Iraq, or making attacks on military installations such as Fort Dix. From all apearances, the TSA, problem-ridden as it may be, does seem to make the cost-benefit ratio of attempting airplane hijackings a lot lower than it previously was - especially given the propaganda value that Al Quaeda or another organization would realize if they could repeat 9-11, or even stage another major hijaking and thereby claim that the U.S. was "helpless" to prevent these attacks. Attempting to demonstrate apparent government "helplessness" is a basic major goal of all insurgent and terrorist groups because of its value in turning the target population against that government.

"Correlation does not demonstrate causation" is fine and dandy, but the fact is that a theoretical causal relationship can be shown here, and more importantly, I don't need to show that the TSA is the sole cause because I'm not arguing that. The fact is that if you want to take a bomb or a gun on a plane you must find a way to get it past the TSA organs that are looking for those objects. You can certainly argue that it is possible to do so, but you cannot argue that it is just as easy as it otherwise would be, any more than you can argue that locking your door does not reduce the likelyhood of burglary because the burglar might break a window.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2012 8:03 pm 
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shuyung wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Then perhaps you'd be so good as to provide that meaning and explain why we should listen to Bruce Schneier, whoever he is?

[...]despite the fact that I know a great deal about security[...]

These are in conflict.

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You, on the other hand, don't know your *** from a hole in the ground in this regard[...]

Is that your professional opinion? Because I am a security professional, and my professional opinion of you is identical.


Oh are you now? How convenient. If you are, then perhaps you could actually address some of the issues at hand, such as for example, the relative cost-benefit ratio of the Israeli method of conducting airport security versus the TSA, and how economy of scale might play into making such a reform in the U.S. rather than making amateur bullshit psychoanalysis trolling posts.

As for those two things being in conflict, Shneier is a computer security expert, not physical. I don't recall him ever being mentioned or cited in any Physical Security, Anti-Terrorism, or Force Protection manual I've ever read or any class I've gone to - and there have been quite a few. He may have some valuable insights, but the fact is that his "security theater" term is A) problematic, in that it can simply be applied to any publicly visible or deterrent measure, and has evidently been corrupted to refer to those things pejoratively and B) that there seems to be no way to show that any given measure is or isn't "security theater". At the very least it's being used here without consideration of its nuances because using the TSA as a whipping boy for the 50th time and (in your case) trying to score points with talk about other people's emotional states which you have neither the information nor ability to evaluate is for some reason more interesting than, say, looking at the cost-benefit ratio of switching to the Israeli method or something.

Maybe, since you're an expert, you could give us some insight on how much extra it would cost to use the Israeli method, whether its practical on the scale of the U.S. and if any economy of scale is to be had? I, in particular, would be inclined to listen to such an argument. Or would that be too much trouble for you?

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Last edited by Diamondeye on Wed Jan 11, 2012 8:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2012 8:25 pm 
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Stathol wrote:
Mookhow wrote:
Bruce Schneier is a cryptology and computer security expert. He's written books on the topics, and in computer circles he's accepted as knowing what he's talking about.

+1

Your (DE's, not Mook's) reaction whenever someone mentions Schneier is baffling to me. Particularly in a case like this, where his opinions aren't even being invoked in favor of (or against) some argument, but merely being mentioned in an explanatory aside about vocabulary. He's a widely recognized expert in the fields of cryptography (particularly applied), computer security, and general security theory/analysis -- and with good reason. There's nothing wrong with not knowing who he is, but you should probably refrain from attacking someone that you obviously know nothing about. To be completely blunt, your **** reaction whenever he's mentioned and your insinuations that his use of the phrase "security theory" somehow negates or refutes his knowledge and expertise ... well, it doesn't "say anything favorable" about your ability to carry on a rational discussion.


My reaction whenever anyone ever mentions him? That's very interesting, because I've never even heard of him before, and I don't recall anyone mentioning him around here at all. People have certainly brought upo "security theater" before, but no one has ever even bothered to define that term; rather just using it as a buzzword for any security arrangement they don't personally like, with no supporting argument other than "Israel does it better", which I ahve not contested. So far, it's been a circular assertion of "The TSA is security theater because it does nothing effective, which we know because it's security theater." Furthermore, I do not see anything in Mr. Schneier's history that indicates his expertise in computer security translates into an equivalent level of expertise in physical security, and despite his unflattering comments on the TSA, their sometimes absurd behavior regarding specific threats does not mean they provide no security whatsoever.

The fact that you seem to have invented some past history of me flipping out about a guy I've... never heard of before says some very unflattering things about the nature of the accusations that I can't carry on a rational discussion. For the moment I'll choose to assume you're confusing me with someone else, or otherwise are simply misremembering. I'm sure you wouldn't just make up a history of me flipping out about I guy I can't recall ever discussing before.

Furthermore, you all seem to be ignoring two important aspects of the definition of security theater":

Quote:
While it may seem that security theater must always cause loss, it may actually be beneficial, at least in a localised situation. This is because perception of security is sometimes more important than security itself.[7] If the potential victims of an attack feel more protected and safer as a result of the measures, then they may carry on activities they would have otherwise avoided. In addition, if the security measures in place appear effective, potential attackers may be dissuaded from proceeding or may direct their attention to a target perceived as less secure. Unsophisticated adversaries in particular may be frightened by superficial impressions of security (such as seeing multiple people in uniform or observing cameras) and not even attempt to find weaknesses or determine effect.


and

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It is inherently difficult to give examples of security theater that are clear and uncontroversial, because once it is agreed by all that a measure is ineffective, the measure seldom has any noticeable influence on perceived risk.


It seems that security theater can be applied to any publicly visible security effort, regardless of actual effect, simply because it has a deterrent effect, and its' pejorative use is simply a way to discount both its deterrent and actual effects based on nothing more than an unstated implication that this somehow makes it worthless.

If you want to argue that A) this is the effect of the TSA and B) it is not worth the money, then by all means do so. At 1.2 billion a year that is likely a defensible position. I also might be more inclined to listen than when people simply want to call it "security theater", quote their favorite computer security expert, and declare any further discussion other than piously agreeing that the government is bad to be out-of-bounds.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2012 9:39 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Oh are you now? How convenient. If you are, then perhaps you could actually address some of the issues at hand, such as for example, the relative cost-benefit ratio of the Israeli method of conducting airport security versus the TSA, and how economy of scale might play into making such a reform in the U.S. rather than making amateur bullshit psychoanalysis trolling posts.

Convenient or not, I am paid by a decent-sized corporation to apply my security expertise for their benefit. As to the cost-benefit analysis you're asking for, there's no way to determine the actual benefit of the TSA without much greater access to the TSA infrastructure than the general public possesses and thus no way to begin to formulate a comparison, nor are you paying me to do so. If you want to procure me the access and pay me, I'll be glad to do so.
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As for those two things being in conflict, Shneier is a computer security expert, not physical. I don't recall him ever being mentioned or cited in any Physical Security, Anti-Terrorism, or Force Protection manual I've ever read or any class I've gone to - and there have been quite a few. He may have some valuable insights, but the fact is that his "security theater" term is A) problematic, in that it can simply be applied to any publicly visible or deterrent measure, and has evidently been corrupted to refer to those things pejoratively and B) that there seems to be no way to show that any given measure is or isn't "security theater". At the very least it's being used here without consideration of its nuances because using the TSA as a whipping boy for the 50th time and (in your case) trying to score points with talk about other people's emotional states which you have neither the information nor ability to evaluate is for some reason more interesting than, say, looking at the cost-benefit ratio of switching to the Israeli method or something.

Maybe, since you're an expert, you could give us some insight on how much extra it would cost to use the Israeli method, whether its practical on the scale of the U.S. and if any economy of scale is to be had? I, in particular, would be inclined to listen to such an argument. Or would that be too much trouble for you?

I figured you would fixate on the fact that the bulk of Schneier's livelihood derives from his cryptography and computer security background and attempt to dismiss his wider expertise. Would it interest you to know that he was a member of the Secure Flight Working Group, an advisory committee of security experts put together by the TSA to assess the feasibility of the Secure Flight proposal? Or that he has authored a number of well-regarded books on the topic of general security?

As to what you may have learned in the manuals and classes you may have read or attended, would these be the same sort of manuals and classes that were calling all Muslims "proto-terrorists"? As recently as this past September?

As to your requests, they are too much trouble for me, short of a large amount of cash and access to sensitive and confidential information. I can't help but notice that one of your defenses, when challenged on a subject, is to make highly unreasonable demands in the hopes that nobody can see them for what they are. Maybe you would like to provide even a shred of evidence that your claims of TSA efficacy are legitimate?

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2012 8:00 am 
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Vindicarre wrote:
No, Hopwin, the argument made wasn't that the TSA coldn't find and confiscate the same **** that the old security could find and confiscate (minus the kids toys, paperweights, cupcakes and water bottles), the argument was that the TSA's methods work and the evidence is "the fact that we do not, in fact, have regular terrorist incidents aboard aircraft".

Hopwin wrote:
Homer's tiger rock or bear rock or whatever may not keep tigers away, but you could bash its brains in with the rock making it an effective anti-tiger/bear weapon.

Again, the argument wasn't that Lisa's tiger rock was or wasn't an effective anti-tiger weapon. I'd go so far as to say that even that is illogical. Just because something can do something in theory, does not mean it can do something effectively.


Effectively by definition means can do the job. I think what you mean to ask is if there are more efficient ways to do it.

You can point to the Israeli model sure. But in a multicultural society that produced the Unibomber and Timothy McVeigh it would not be effective. It is one thing to single out Arab flyers for additional screening in a country consistenting of Israeli's and Arabs; it is quite another in a country full of Asians, Hispanics, Arabs, Whites, Indians and every other ethnic group conceivable.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2012 10:37 am 
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Hopwin wrote:
You can point to the Israeli model sure. But in a multicultural society that produced the Unibomber and Timothy McVeigh it would not be effective. It is one thing to single out Arab flyers for additional screening in a country consistenting of Israeli's and Arabs; it is quite another in a country full of Asians, Hispanics, Arabs, Whites, Indians and every other ethnic group conceivable.


The Israeli model does not operate by ethnic profiling (hell - it can't. The Israeli and Palestinian people are both Semitic. You can't tell them apart easily if they don't want you to.) It does, however, do psychological profiling on an individual basis. This is likely a big part of the extra cost...the security checkpoint staff are trained behavioral experts. They are not $13/hour rent-a-cops, they're highly trained specialists and probably paid accordingly.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2012 11:44 am 
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Hopwin wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
No, Hopwin, the argument made wasn't that the TSA coldn't find and confiscate the same **** that the old security could find and confiscate (minus the kids toys, paperweights, cupcakes and water bottles), the argument was that the TSA's methods work and the evidence is "the fact that we do not, in fact, have regular terrorist incidents aboard aircraft".

Hopwin wrote:
Homer's tiger rock or bear rock or whatever may not keep tigers away, but you could bash its brains in with the rock making it an effective anti-tiger/bear weapon.

Again, the argument wasn't that Lisa's tiger rock was or wasn't an effective anti-tiger weapon. I'd go so far as to say that even that is illogical. Just because something can do something in theory, does not mean it can do something effectively.


Effectively by definition means can do the job. I think what you mean to ask is if there are more efficient ways to do it.


Oh there are most definitely more efficient ways to kill a tiger; what I'm saying is that there is only one way the scenario ends when you try to bash a tiger's head in with a rock and it's not effective - the tiger lives.

Hopwin wrote:
You can point to the Israeli model sure. But in a multicultural society that produced the Unibomber and Timothy McVeigh it would not be effective. It is one thing to single out Arab flyers for additional screening in a country consistenting of Israeli's and Arabs; it is quite another in a country full of Asians, Hispanics, Arabs, Whites, Indians and every other ethnic group conceivable.

Let me be quite clear, I'm not equating the TSA to the tiger rock. I'm equating the statement that the only proof you need that the TSA works is that we do not have regular terrorist incidents aboard aircraft with someone saying that the only proof you need that this tiger rock works is that there are not regular tiger incidents in its vicinity. They are both statements that demand someone prove a negative in order to dispute them and are both examples of the cum hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy.
As for the Israeli method not being effective here, the technique (as Taly pointed out) that is used in their method relies on psychological/behavioral profiling; not racial profiling.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2012 12:08 pm 
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No, they freely admit it is racial profiling:

http://www.boston.com/news/world/middle ... _security/

Quote:
Before approaching the ticket counter, passengers are thoroughly questioned by "selectors" who look for travelers who match a suspicious profile.

"In the U.S., profiling is a bad word," Liss said, but he defended the practice, saying it is done by "intelligent, motivated" university students who served in Israel's military and can identify passengers who could pose a potential risk.


http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/ne ... s-1.261075

Quote:
So why, I asked, are we still allowed to board airplanes at Ben-Gurion International Airport with bottles and tubes of liquid brought from home, while in Heathrow or JFK they confiscate our face cream and toothpaste?

"Oh, that's simple," he answered matter of factly. "We use racial profiling, they don't."

Only after the visit, rereading my notes, I noticed a curious detail in his answer. While the entire interview had been conducted in Hebrew, he had said those two words, "racial profiling," in English.

To Israelis, the practice of picking people out based on racial stereotypes is so self-evident, there isn't even a Hebrew term for it.In the ongoing international debate over airport security, which has followed the failed attempt by Nigerian student Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab to blow up a plane carrying himself and 289 others near Detroit, much attention has been paid to the methods used to screen passengers at airports.



As to your statement about more proof, I again present the photo of the 120+ weapons collected. You assert that the people carrying them had no ill-intentions but you have no evidence of that whereas the very attempt to bring dynamite onto a plane is pretty damning circumstancial evidence that intent was there.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2012 12:10 pm 
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Talya wrote:
Hopwin wrote:
You can point to the Israeli model sure. But in a multicultural society that produced the Unibomber and Timothy McVeigh it would not be effective. It is one thing to single out Arab flyers for additional screening in a country consistenting of Israeli's and Arabs; it is quite another in a country full of Asians, Hispanics, Arabs, Whites, Indians and every other ethnic group conceivable.


The Israeli model does not operate by ethnic profiling (hell - it can't. The Israeli and Palestinian people are both Semitic. You can't tell them apart easily if they don't want you to.) It does, however, do psychological profiling on an individual basis. This is likely a big part of the extra cost...the security checkpoint staff are trained behavioral experts. They are not $13/hour rent-a-cops, they're highly trained specialists and probably paid accordingly.


You still think using their system would be a good idea, despite what I showed was a 5-fold increase in costs? It can't be done. It's not just the cost, either. For example, one critical layer of El Al's program is the individual interview. Another is preventing "masses" of people, like long lines. Your first interview is when you pull up to the terminal in your car. In the US, even if you had all the highly trained interviewers you needed, there is not enough space for all of this. The traffic problems with each vehicle going through an interview is obvious, but the traffic inside the terminal is another problem.

It can't be done, not within anything approaching reason.


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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2012 12:28 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
You still think using their system would be a good idea, despite what I showed was a 5-fold increase in costs? It can't be done. It's not just the cost, either. For example, one critical layer of El Al's program is the individual interview. Another is preventing "masses" of people, like long lines. Your first interview is when you pull up to the terminal in your car. In the US, even if you had all the highly trained interviewers you needed, there is not enough space for all of this. The traffic problems with each vehicle going through an interview is obvious, but the traffic inside the terminal is another problem.

It can't be done, not within anything approaching reason.


Your own numbers showed this would result in less than a $33 increase in cost per fare --quite affordable, even without factoring in the economy of scale, which could make it significantly cheaper.

As for the rest, I don't see that this is even an issue. They already have the space -- they're currently wasting more space than that with boarding security. The efficiencies gained by switching to such a system would offset the extra checkpoint required. It's just a matter of reorganizing. A small interview booth on the highway on the way into most airports is less of a hiccup than a toll booth.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2012 12:39 pm 
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Talya wrote:
Arathain Kelvar wrote:
You still think using their system would be a good idea, despite what I showed was a 5-fold increase in costs? It can't be done. It's not just the cost, either. For example, one critical layer of El Al's program is the individual interview. Another is preventing "masses" of people, like long lines. Your first interview is when you pull up to the terminal in your car. In the US, even if you had all the highly trained interviewers you needed, there is not enough space for all of this. The traffic problems with each vehicle going through an interview is obvious, but the traffic inside the terminal is another problem.

It can't be done, not within anything approaching reason.


Your own numbers showed this would result in less than a $33 increase in cost per fare --quite affordable, even without factoring in the economy of scale, which could make it significantly cheaper.

As for the rest, I don't see that this is even an issue. They already have the space -- they're currently wasting more space than that with boarding security. The efficiencies gained by switching to such a system would offset the extra checkpoint required. It's just a matter of reorganizing. A small interview booth on the highway on the way into most airports is less of a hiccup than a toll booth.

It still won't work without racial profiling which is worthless in a multi-ethnic culture.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2012 12:43 pm 
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Hopwin wrote:
No, they freely admit it is racial profiling:

http://www.boston.com/news/world/middle ... _security/

Quote:
Before approaching the ticket counter, passengers are thoroughly questioned by "selectors" who look for travelers who match a suspicious profile.

"In the U.S., profiling is a bad word," Liss said, but he defended the practice, saying it is done by "intelligent, motivated" university students who served in Israel's military and can identify passengers who could pose a potential risk.


http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/ne ... s-1.261075

Quote:
So why, I asked, are we still allowed to board airplanes at Ben-Gurion International Airport with bottles and tubes of liquid brought from home, while in Heathrow or JFK they confiscate our face cream and toothpaste?

"Oh, that's simple," he answered matter of factly. "We use racial profiling, they don't."

Only after the visit, rereading my notes, I noticed a curious detail in his answer. While the entire interview had been conducted in Hebrew, he had said those two words, "racial profiling," in English.

To Israelis, the practice of picking people out based on racial stereotypes is so self-evident, there isn't even a Hebrew term for it.In the ongoing international debate over airport security, which has followed the failed attempt by Nigerian student Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab to blow up a plane carrying himself and 289 others near Detroit, much attention has been paid to the methods used to screen passengers at airports.


Fair enough, what I should have said was:

As for the Israeli method not being effective here, the technique (as Taly pointed out) that is used in their method, and would be effective here, relies on psychological/behavioral profiling; not racial profiling.

Hopwin wrote:
As to your statement about more proof, I again present the photo of the 120+ weapons collected. You assert that the people carrying them had no ill-intentions but you have no evidence of that whereas the very attempt to bring dynamite onto a plane is pretty damning circumstancial evidence that intent was there.


Making sure I am clear, I made no statement about more proof, I identified the statement containing the phrase "the only proof you need" as fallacious. I don't recall asserting anything about their intentions other than emphasizing that the TSA states most passengers said they forgot the items were in their baggage.
As for the dynamite, was it live (or inert like the "hand grenade"), was it real (or fake like the toy guns), was it a case like the C4 in that it was brought on the plane to bring it from place to place for perfectly benign reasons or was it brought on the plane with malicious intent? I have a guess about its efficacy judging from the other items highlighted on that board. As I can't read minds, I really don't have a clue about the carrier's intent, but I do know that is wasn't found due to some previously unknown method that only the TSA employs.

I've always been exasperated by the idea that there are hundreds of people waiting in these security lines, wouldn't a terrorist act have the same effect there as on a plane (if not more, "Your Western Security methods will doom you all! Hahahahahah")?

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2012 12:59 pm 
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Talya wrote:
Your own numbers showed this would result in less than a $33 increase in cost per fare --quite affordable, even without factoring in the economy of scale, which could make it significantly cheaper.


Uh, that's a huge cost.

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As for the rest, I don't see that this is even an issue. They already have the space -- they're currently wasting more space than that with boarding security. The efficiencies gained by switching to such a system would offset the extra checkpoint required. It's just a matter of reorganizing. A small interview booth on the highway on the way into most airports is less of a hiccup than a toll booth.


LMFAO - you're just handwaving this away? It is not a matter of reorganizing at all. We're talking about serious infrastructure improvements, and renovating the insides of nearly every airport.

This is absurd. Let's take your "small interview booth" example. How much time do you spend at a toll booth? 5 seconds? 15? And what's the AVERAGE time? Including EZPass, where they don't even stop, it's, maybe a 4 second slow down. My local airport, which is regional but not enormous, has four lanes of traffic heading into the airport. I think two of these go straight through the terminal without unloading and loading. So you have 2 heavily used lanes of traffic, moving at 10 MPH. That's more than 1 car per second, between both lanes. How long would the interview take? 20 seconds?

That means you'd need 10 lanes to maintain the flow rate.

How you think an interview is less of a hiccup than a toll booth is beyond me. I don't think you know what you're talking about.


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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2012 1:00 pm 
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Vindicarre wrote:
I've always been exasperated by the idea that there are hundreds of people waiting in these security lines, wouldn't a terrorist act have the same effect there as on a plane (if not more, "Your Western Security methods will doom you all! Hahahahahah")?

I can't tell you how many times I've thought the exact same thing standing in those lines. CLE is relatively small but there are easily 200 people waiting in major airports such as McCarran. That said, if we ignore the racial profiling and instead switch to asking every flier a series of questions you'd have the same net result. Lots of people waiting around to talk to someone about your childhood, favorite foods, reason for travelling, whatever other screening they put in place.

I said it in a previous post about this but I still think dogs are the most effective screening method out there with a pat-down of the same ilk as attending a football game. You could cut out the pat-down if you put an air marshall on every flight though as the dogs would find any explosives/firearms and if you smuggled a pair of nunchuks on board it wouldn't mean jack in the face of an armed officer.

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Hopwin wrote:
You could cut out the pat-down if you put an air marshall on every flight though as the dogs would find any explosives/firearms and if you smuggled a pair of nunchuks on board it wouldn't mean jack in the face of an armed officer.


I pulled some numbers for you and came up with a ballpark estimate for the costs of this, like you requested. You never responded. Are the costs acceptable to you?


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I thought that was included in the $30-40 per ticket, as that's part of the Israeli security method at Ben Gurion. Yes, it's more than acceptable, it's preferable.

Hop, yeah, I've always thought dogs were a good idea too, in conjunction with X-ray and air marshals.

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Sorry, didn't think you wanted an answer lol. $33 per flight works for me on an average commercial flight that'd work out to what $0.33 per ticket? I am assuming swapping out the existing workers, scanners, etc, for trained LEOs with appropriately trained dogs would be an equivalent cost though.

/edit saw Vindi's post above. Assuming it is per ticket instead of flight I would still be good with it under the constraint that I no longer need to show up to flights 1.5 hours earlier (my time is more valuable than that).

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Hopwin wrote:
Sorry, didn't think you wanted an answer lol. $33 per flight works for me on an average commercial flight that'd work out to what $0.33 per ticket? I am assuming swapping out the existing workers, scanners, etc, for trained LEOs with appropriately trained dogs would be an equivalent cost though.


It's not $33 per flight. It's a LOT more than that, it's $33 per passenger. I still think that's preferable.

I have no issues with the X-ray machines people complain about, really. It's the inefficient "Take off your shoes, open your laptop bag, place your keys in the bin, you can't bring that handcream unless you check it in your luggage, oh, hold on, you're our random screwed passenger, hold on while we feel you up" bullshit. It's not targeted at all, it's completely random, with security staff not using training or intuition - just following procedures by rote - which is utterly pointless.

In parlance related to my employment area, it's like the difference between calling a script-monkey helpdesk with call-takers following rigid guidelines and scripts, and getting a trained IT professional being paid well to actually take a look at your problem. Yeah, one is more expensive. Its also the one that works.

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Hopwin wrote:
Sorry, didn't think you wanted an answer lol. $33 per flight works for me on an average commercial flight that'd work out to what $0.33 per ticket? I am assuming swapping out the existing workers, scanners, etc, for trained LEOs with appropriately trained dogs would be an equivalent cost though.

/edit saw Vindi's post above. Assuming it is per ticket instead of flight I would still be good with it under the constraint that I no longer need to show up to flights 1.5 hours earlier (my time is more valuable than that).


No - Israel's methods would be roughly $40 more per passenger, excluding the myriad of infrastructure improvements necessary, which would be what, a billion per airport? Would depend on the size of the airport.

I was talking specifically about the air marshall cost which I think I ball-parked at 1.2 billion. Yeah, if you passed on Israel's methodology (which does not scale and is completely unworkable in the US) and cut out 1.2 billion of waste in TSA's current 6 billion or so budget, and put a marshall on each flight, I'd be on board I think.

edit: you'd still have to screen for explosives, like you said. an air marshall wouldn't be effective against a suicide bomber. dogs? digital sniffers? you'd need something.


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I said dogs. Lots and lots of dogs. Armies of canines tearing limbs off terrorists and ripping IEDs out of suicide bombers anuses.

At an extra $40 per ticket my time is still more valuable so I'd be on board.

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Diamondeye wrote:
My reaction whenever anyone ever mentions him? That's very interesting, because I've never even heard of him before, and I don't recall anyone mentioning him around here at all.


Diamondeye wrote:
For the moment I'll choose to assume you're confusing me with someone else, or otherwise are simply misremembering. I'm sure you wouldn't just make up a history of me flipping out about I guy I can't recall ever discussing before.

I apologize. Apparently this is the case. I would have sworn you were involved in some big stink about him in the last thread about the TSA where he was mentioned; I thought it was either the backscatter thread or the one about NJ resisting the TSA. But apparently I just dreamed that, or something. I honestly can't explain why I thought that was the case, because I'm not finding anything like that, even by some other poster. :psyduck:

Diamondeye wrote:
Furthermore, you all seem to be ignoring two important aspects of the definition of security theater":

<stuff>


Well, "security theater" definitely isn't a rigorously defined term, so I'm not sure you can really call that an aspect of its definition. But that's a mostly irrelevant aside. What you've quoted was based on an editorial by Peter Glaskowsky, based on a lecture by Schneier, based on The Psychology of Security, an essay that he wrote a few years ago. I actually more or less agree with what Glaskowsky is saying, but the wiki blurb is not a very good reflection of what either Glaskowsky or Schneier were trying to say to about the possible merits of security theater. To add my own emphasis, this is the issue with the wiki summary:

Quote:
While it may seem that security theater must always cause loss, it may actually be beneficial, at least in a localised situation. This is because perception of security is sometimes more important than security itself.[7] If the potential victims of an attack feel more protected and safer as a result of the measures, then they may carry on activities they would have otherwise avoided. In addition, if the security measures in place appear effective, potential attackers may be dissuaded from proceeding or may direct their attention to a target perceived as less secure. Unsophisticated adversaries in particular may be frightened by superficial impressions of security (such as seeing multiple people in uniform or observing cameras) and not even attempt to find weaknesses or determine effect.

Nothing the summary is saying is wrong, it just fails to explain exactly what those "localised situations" "may" "sometimes" be. And in the case of the long sentence I've underlined, completely omits any mention of context, as though encouraging people not to avoid activities is just universally beneficially. That's not a nitpick -- the issue of context is a large and essential elemental of the essay.

To be more specific, what Schneier was trying to say (and Glaskowsky was "seconding"), is that there are many situations where people are actually quite secure but feel that they are not. Defining exactly what is meant by being "actually secure" is a little tricky, but mathematically you can look at it simply as the product of risk (probability of harm) and the cost/magnitude of that harm. An example that Schneier gave in the lecture that Glaskowsky attended was the "Tylenol crisis" in 1982. Not to make light of 7 people being murdered, but people developed an irrational fear of OTC medication as a result. And by that, I mean a change in their behavior that was far out of proportion to the actual security (as defined above) of the situation. In these kinds of situations (and only in those situations), a bit of inexpensive security theater is theoretically beneficial. The wiki summary does a poor job of conveying that context.

Secondly, there is a less contextual argument to make regarding security theater: that it might be psychologically deterring (under any circumstances) to the low-hanging fruit. And, therefore, it might have a slightly larger effect on real security than a direct analysis would suggest. Fair enough. However, such as this may be the case (that depends on the specifics), it's important to appreciate that this argument is only saying that security theater would be more effective than nothing at all, not that it would be more effective than real security. And it's equally important to understand what the argument isn't saying. It's not saying that security theater is necessarily even worthwhile over nothing at all -- just that it might provide more real security.

Diamondeye wrote:
It seems that [security theater's] ... pejorative use is simply a way to discount both its deterrent and actual effects based on nothing more than an unstated implication that this somehow makes it worthless.

Diamondeye wrote:
and despite [Mr. Schneier's] unflattering comments on the TSA, their sometimes absurd behavior regarding specific threats does not mean they provide no security whatsoever.

It may not have been communicated very well, but I don't think this is really what anyone here is intending to say. And I'm quite sure it's not what Schneier thinks, either. One of his recurrent themes is trade-offs: that every increase in real security has an associated real cost. You can't get something for nothing, as they say. "Cost", in this context is deliberately vague. It may a direct economic cost of implementing the measures that increase real security, cost in terms of lost freedom, cost in terms of lost convenience, etc. Whether something is worthless or worthwhile is simply a question of whether you think the trade-off is a good one.

So you're quite right that being security theater doesn't automatically make something worthless. If we value whatever little effect it might have on real security more than we value what we gave up to obtain it, then it has worth at least in a literal sense. But as Schneier emphasizes in the essay, the core problem is that humans are really bad at making modern day security trade-offs. Or to be more accurate, we're really good at understanding costs -- which is half of the trade-off equation, and one of the two key components of security (cost of failure) -- but horrendously bad at estimating odds.

Schneier wrote:
Why is it that, when food poisoning kills 5,000 people every year and 9/11 terrorists killed 2,973 people in one non-repeated incident, we are spending tens of billions of dollars per year (not even counting the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan) on terrorism defense while the entire budget for the Food and Drug Administration in 2007 is only $1.9 billion?
[...]
Most of the time, when the perception of security doesn't match the reality of security, it's because the perception of the risk doesn't match the reality of the risk. We worry about the wrong things: paying too much attention to minor risks and not enough attention to major ones. We don't correctly assess the magnitude of different risks. A lot of this can be chalked up to bad information or bad mathematics, but there are some general pathologies that come up over and over again.
In Beyond Fear, I listed five:
  • People exaggerate spectacular but rare risks and downplay common risks.
  • People have trouble estimating risks for anything not exactly like their normal situation.
  • Personified risks are perceived to be greater than anonymous risks.
  • People underestimate risks they willingly take and overestimate risks in situations they can't control.
  • Last, people overestimate risks that are being talked about and remain an object of public scrutiny.1


Here's my point: I think that for the most part, the specific Gladers that are criticizing TSA procedures for being "security theater" are familiar with all this. The criticism isn't intended to be: "This is security theater, and therefore bad, and we should just get rid of it entirely". Rather...

I think it's a pretty universally accepted truth that the cost of the TSA procedures (i.e., the procedural changes since 9/11) is high. That's cost in dollars, time, convenience, freedoms, dignity, etc. There might be (even considerable) disagreement about the individual components or how much we value them, but I don't think very many people would disagree that the sum of all of them is considerably large. There's nothing necessarily wrong with that. It's a good trade-off if these changes produce an equivalently large increase in our real security. But if not -- if the changes are an example of security theater -- then this a poor trade-off indeed. When people criticize the procedures for being "security theater", this is what they're trying to point out, not that security theater is automatically bad.

Diamondeye wrote:
If you want to argue that A) this is the effect of the TSA and B) it is not worth the money, then by all means do so. At 1.2 billion a year that is likely a defensible position.

In other words, basically this. It's not just that it's theater, but that it's theater with a very high cost of admission. It may not be "worthless", but it's not worthwhile. We're caught up in exactly the kind of psychological trap that Schneier was describing above: spectacular, abnormal, uncontrollable risks that receive huge amounts of attention. And it's making us accept increasingly stupid counter-measures because we believe that we're getting more out of them than we really are.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2012 5:57 pm 
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Very well said, Stathol.

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 13, 2012 8:28 am 
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Stathol wrote:
I wrote a lot of words here.


So basically we've come full circle to the argument of effectiveness versus efficiency.

By the way I think the person you were thinking of who questioned the "expert" was me. IIRC the guy has two degrees in Computer Science and I personally don't feel that qualifies him to speak as an authority on the subject.

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 13, 2012 8:45 am 
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Here's Bruce Schneier on airport security.

http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/297357-5

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