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Uncharged phones, laptops to be banned on US-bound flights

nzherald.co.nz

64 points by ferno 12 years ago · 89 comments

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yason 12 years ago

Since when has the angle of terrorist attack shifted back to blowing up planes instead of flying them into strategic targets?

A laptop with a fully charged battery can cause a lot more havoc over the Atlantic ocean than one with the drained battery. Presumably you could bring in a couple of extra batteries as well, because it's going to be a long flight.

If they're worried about someone building a bomb into the insides of a laptop that you can't turn on, then hasn't that been pretty much the core of airport security since its inception -- and pretty much a problem solved to all practical extents since several decades ago?

I mean, that's why they've been scanning all cabin baggage for decades to see if there are guns inside radios or tanks of interesting liquids inside some suitable item. They've been looking at the x-rays of laptops for twenty years, and now they suddenly start worrying about bombs being built into one?

And why aren't they worried about the cargo baggage which also contains electronic devices that are potentially uncharged? If they can spot bombs in the electronics in your big baggages without checking if they boot up, then why can't they do that for your cabin bags?

Unlike water bottles that you can dispose, this is going to be a big problem. You just don't leave your laptop or phone at some airport: you simply don't fly.

This makes absolutely no sense whatsoever, and the sickness spreads to airports outside US. This means we soon can't fly with uncharged electronics in Europe either because the same security gates can allow someone to board a flight the USA.

I'm just wondering who is it that benefits from all this? Where does the money go, who are the people who can push these endless rules and regulations for their own gain because there sure as hell isn't a gain for anyone else?

  • panarky 12 years ago

    > They've been looking at the x-rays of laptops for twenty years, and now they suddenly start worrying about bombs being built into one?

    Batteries on laptops and cell phones look like a big opaque block on x-rays[0]. And 6 grams of PETN can do a lot of damage[1].

    New intelligence indicates that the AQAP bombmaker responsible for the underwear bomber and the printer bomber has figured out how to replace the battery with a bomb. It's not visible on x-ray, and it's sealed so it won't trigger the explosive trace detection equipment[2] either.

    > And why aren't they worried about the cargo baggage which also contains electronic devices that are potentially uncharged?

    Presumably these devices would need to be held directly against the fuselage as the underwear bomber failed to do[3], so they'd need to be carried by a passenger instead of in a random location in the baggage compartment.

    And it's not about whether the battery is charged, it's about whether the device has power at all. Naturally TSA countermeasures are trivially circumvented. Replace the optical drive with a second battery, it still powers on even if the first battery has been replaced with a bomb.

    Some reports say they're looking to surgically implant a device under the skin[4]. How do you screen for that?

    [0] http://www.petergof.com/x-ray/images/profiler.jpg

    [1] http://edition.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/world/2009/12/28... (video)

    [2] http://media.cmgdigital.com/shared/img/photos/2012/08/11/8d/...

    [3] http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/explainer/20...

    [4] http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/world/418791/spotlight-on-qa...

    • micampe 12 years ago

      Alright, so open up the battery, keep half the cells so the laptop works fine and replace the other half with PETN.

  • anigbrowl 12 years ago

    And why aren't they worried about the cargo baggage which also contains electronic devices that are potentially uncharged?

    Because you can't swap in a live battery in mid-flight if the device is stuck in the cargo hold, of course. I'm not sure what's so terrible about this, since most people will have a charger with them anyway. If their device happens to be out of battery but they can plug in the charger and demonstrate its safe operation, there's no problem. Indeed, this doesn't strike me as anything particularly new, rather an old story being recycled as churnalism.

    • adamnemecek 12 years ago

      The TSA released a statement about it today

      http://www.tsa.gov/press/releases/2014/07/06/enhanced-securi...

      • anigbrowl 12 years ago

        A statement so vague that it could be construed to mean anything. Every minute adjustment of TSA standard procedures is intended to 'enhance' their security regime.

        • panarky 12 years ago

          The secrecy is ridiculous. The bombers and bombmakers already know what's going on. The TSA is just keeping innocent travelers in the dark.

    • yason 12 years ago

      Swapping in a live battery probably isn't a problem. They want to see if the device works or not.

      What I meant that if I build a bomb into a laptop, and use its battery space to contain the explosive so that it looks 99.99% the same in the X-ray, I can just put the bomb in the checked in baggage and have it in the cargo space while not having to show anyone that the device doesn't boot up.

      But if they can already detect bombs built into devices such as laptops for checked-in baggage — which they obviously(?) and presumably do — then why can't they detect these bombs similarly for cabin baggage? They could just do that instead of asking the passengers to boot their devices.

  • jsmeaton 12 years ago

    > They also are concerned that hard-to-detect bombs could be built into shoes, said the officials, who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue.

    Whelp. Better ban shoes too. Otherwise terrorism.

  • wereHamster 12 years ago

    > A laptop with a fully charged battery can cause a lot more havoc over the Atlantic ocean than one with the drained battery. Presumably you could bring in a couple of extra batteries as well, because it's going to be a long flight.

    I have an external battery for my X220 which I use on long flights. Just out of curiosity I calculated the equivalent energy in TNT which the batteries hold. It was about 220g. And Li-ion are known for their explosive discharge.

  • josu 12 years ago

    "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity"

gkoberger 12 years ago

Clearly it has nothing to do with the device being charged, but rather eliminating an excuse as to why the device doesn't have the ability to be powered on. (Allegedly proving it's a real device, and not a bomb being made to look like a laptop or phone.)

That being said: http://xkcd.com/651/

  • rcthompson 12 years ago

    Yeah, my first thought upon reading the title was that this was about ensuring access to the data on any device coming into the country.

  • NoMoreNicksLeft 12 years ago

    Is there any evidence that terrorists are capable of constructing a device that plausibly looks like a cell phone but is a bomb? Have they ever done this in the past?

    What about laptops?

    I do not think this is about security, so much as it is about punishing people who make it impossible for the relevant officials and spooks to snoop on the devices.

  • lucaspiller 12 years ago

    Maybe that's a good excuse for why Apple no longer make devices with user serviceable batteries :)

irons 12 years ago

Despite appearing the New Zealand Herald, the story comes with a byline from the Daily Mail, which, for a story related to terrorism, reduces its credibility to zero.

To pick an example from today: http://tompride.wordpress.com/2014/07/06/daily-mail-journali...

x1798DE 12 years ago

From what I remember, Firewire used to have direct hardware access to the RAM. Does the iOS lightning charger have something similar?

I may be paranoid, but I could imagine the TSA offering little charging stations so you can get enough juice to turn the phone on, and from there it's a short leap to imagine that the other side of that "charger" is going to be something that sucks down as much information as they can from the phone.

  • DrJokepu 12 years ago

    While I don't doubt for a moment that the US Government has the technology to do this, I do doubt that the TSA, which is basically the government agency equivalent of the shortbus is allowed to have access to it.

    • x1798DE 12 years ago

      It's not particularly difficult technology to pull off. The actual TSA agents are clearly dumb as rocks, but if you give them a machine that just sucks up data and sends it off to some central repository, they'll have no problem plugging it in.

      From my understanding, they already can make sort of "notes" on your file - including books you have in your luggage, that sort of thing. It's not that crazy to imagine that they'd distribute some simple juice-jacking equipment if people are very frequently wanting to plug in.

  • evan_ 12 years ago

    They'd only be doing this for a tiny percentage of phones that travel through checkpoints, though- and it's not clear to me what they would be looking for.

    If there was a real motivation to secretly snoop on every phone that passed through a TSA checkpoint they'd come up with a better excuse that would allow them to plug in every phone- or they would more likely just be upfront about it. They haven't really tried to be sneaky about any other invasive screenings, to my knowledge.

  • selectodude 12 years ago

    Thunderbolt does, Lightning does not. Also, it pops up a notification asking if you trust the source or if you merely want to allow charging.

    • x1798DE 12 years ago

      Ah, I am not in the Apple ecosystem, so I think I was mixing up the different types of connectors. Good to know that they make this sort of thing a priority, though.

  • cheald 12 years ago
    • benburton 12 years ago

      A great idea, but do you think pulling out one of these is going to put the mind of the TSA agent who wants to examine your phone at ease?

mstolpm 12 years ago

I always assumed the x-ray machines would show operators if a phone or notebook seems to be tampered/modified. If looking at a boot screen makes the process more secure, we should really be concerned by the airport security in general.

  • WatchDog 12 years ago

    A lithium ion battery pack and a lump of C4 probably don't look too much different under an xray.

Mvandenbergh 12 years ago

My guess is that they have intelligence that someone is working very hard to do something that I've long worried someone would do, which is to make explosives look like the cells in Li-on batteries on x-rays.

If you look at an x-ray of a laptop or tablet, it's obvious where the batteries are, they're regular shaped objects much denser than the circuitry in the rest of the device.

If you mixed explosives with something to make them denser to x-rays (so that they look like lithium masses) and shaped them to look right, you would avoid the only really effective screening tool available. If you can do that, then sealing them and cleaning off residues to keep from setting off explosive vapour detectors would be trivial.

This way, they can verify that at least some of the batteries in the device are real. It still wouldn't prevent someone replacing some of the cells with explosive and wiring the rest to give the right voltage but less capacity but doing that would require custom battery controllers which is another step up in sophistication. Every step up in sophistication is an opportunity to intercept terror networks.

  • NoMoreNicksLeft 12 years ago

    > My guess is that they have intelligence that someone is working very hard to do something that I've long worried someone would do, which is to make explosives look like the cells in Li-on batteries on x-rays.

    That's a Hollywood movie plot.

    If you wanted to mask it on X-rays, put it in a Play-Doh canister. It's not that damned hard to fake things out.

    The terrorists, so much as they exist, aren't doing these things. Laziness? Uncleverness? I don't know why. But protecting us from imaginary threats by making our lives miserable is disgusting and intolerable.

    > This way, they can verify that at least some of the batteries in the device are real.

    If they can do that, what prevents them from putting a small battery in that will power it for a minute to get it past the check point?

    Again, it's fucking stupid to try to protect the airlines from Hollywood movie plots. First, they never seem to happen, and second the misery the protection causes outweighs any possible benefits.

    More people died in bathtubs that year than on September 11th. If they wanted to save lives, we'd have a war on bathtubs, not a war on terrorism.

    • anigbrowl 12 years ago

      Again, it's fucking stupid to try to protect the airlines from Hollywood movie plots. First, they never seem to happen

      I was in Europe on September 11, 2001. I turned on the TV after a busy day and at first thought it was showing a disaster movie, until I changed the channel and found the same thing.

      More people died in bathtubs that year than on September 11th. If they wanted to save lives, we'd have a war on bathtubs, not a war on terrorism.

      This is not correct. 1/10th as many people died in bathtubs, although a similar number died in all drowning accidents (some of which are the result of heart attacks or other incapacity suffered while in the water, making the exact cause of death hard to establish): http://danger.mongabay.com/injury_death.htm Of course, we don't have to look far to find things that are more deadly than terrorism in the aggregate - motor vehicle accidents, for example, do kill a lot more people than terrorism does.

      But what your argument fails to address is that accidental deaths are highly distributed and largely uncorrelated while terrorist activity is concentrated and systematic. The qualitative differences are huge, just as there's a huge difference between being hit by a pound of sand (not painful unless some of it gets in your eyes or you inhale it) and being hit by a rock of the same weight (painful and with much greater potential to be fatal). As well as the immediate economic and personal losses, catastrophic events also tend to set big changes in motion. It's highly questionable, for example, whether we would have invaded Iraq absent 9-11 and it's equally unlikely that we would have invaded Afghanistan.

      Of course that doesn't mean we should organize everything around the very low probability of terrorist attack or any other concentrated risk factor, but to ignore the multiplier effects of concentration is also facile.

      • mikeash 12 years ago

        It annoys me to no end when people bring up the extreme overreaction to terrorism as justification for paying extra attention to terrorism.

        You're mixing up cause and effect here. Invading Iraq/Afghanistan is not a reason to put a lot of effort into counterterrorism. It's a reason not to.

        The US is like a country that's allergic to bee stings. The immune system is constantly finding new ways to fight bee stings harder and faster than before. And when we point out that the vast majority of the damage done by bee stings is actually done by the immune system's reaction, the counterargument is that we suffered a lot of damage in the last bee sting, so we need to react.

        Imagine a "keep calm and carry on" reaction to 9/11 instead of the panic attack we actually had.

        Yes, the differences are huge. And we should work to make them not be huge, instead of using the huge differences to justify making huge differences.

        • anigbrowl 12 years ago

          Too bad. I am equally inclined to roll my eyes when people make false equivalences between terrorism and things like weather or dispersed accidents. I don't see terrorism as a massive existential threat, but the idea that it will go away if ignored is just as foolish as over-reaction.

          Imagine a "keep calm and carry on" reaction to 9/11 instead of the panic attack we actually had.

          There is no country on earth that would respond to an attack of that scale with equanimity. You seem to forget that 'keep calm and carry on' was thought up as part of morale-boosting publicity campaign to be deployed as a response to the outbreak of war in 1939, although the plan was not put into practice. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keep_Calm_and_Carry_On

          Please try looking at actual historical examples instead of imaginary ones.

          • mikeash 12 years ago

            I'm not saying it would go away if ignored. I'm just saying that trying to decrease our reaction to it would be for the best. It's going to happen whether or not we want it. All we can realistically do is try to limit the damage, 99.9% of which we inflict on ourselves.

            I don't understand why you think I "forget" anything or that my example is "imaginary". I am proposing a response and using a well known phrase to illustrate it.

            • anigbrowl 12 years ago

              Sorry I missed this yesterday.

              I disagree that 'it's going to happen whether or not we want it.' In the abstract yes, but again you're back to saying counterterrorism is pointless. I also disagree that 99.9 of the damage is self-inflicted although a high percentage is. US reaction to terrorism is actually mild by comparison to most countries. The UK is festooned with video cameras and terrorist suspects are subject to different detention conditions from regular criminals. In Spain you can expect to undergo security checks when taking a train. Perhaps you could furnish some examples of countries that have a more laissez-faire approach to terrorism for comparison.

              As for 'keep calm and carry on' I urge you to look into the historical provenance of the phrase. For one thing it was dreamt up as a campaign to reassure a population facing total war, and for another it was shelved at the time (despite some 2 million posters have been printed) because officials realized it was patronizing and unresponsive to public concerns.

              • mikeash 12 years ago

                Counterterrorism in general is not pointless. Counterterrorism in the form of ultra-specific TSA directives is pointless.

                Terrorists are in short supply, while methods of attack are essentially unlimited. Effective counterterrorism will attack what's in short supply. In other words, it needs to look for terrorists, not attempt to stop every single conceivable method of attack. The former can be useful, the latter is fruitless.

                How many countries have carried out something as catastrophically stupid as the 2003 invasion of Iraq in response to a terrorist attack? If you want a country that took a milder approach to terrorism, given that, I'd say "all of them". Yeah, we didn't completely trample over everybody's civil liberties, we just killed a ton of people, put the government in deep debt, and wrecked the economy.

                Also, did you really use "terrorist suspects are subject to different detention conditions from regular criminals" as an example of how the UK reacted worse than the US? Have you not heard of Guantanamo Bay? How many people did the UK hold indefinitely without trial because they were too dangerous to be released but could not be convicted of a crime? (To be clear, this isn't completely rhetorical. I wouldn't be surprised if the answer is not zero. But I also don't think it's in the hundreds.)

                I don't know why you persist in thinking that I'm somehow unaware of the origins of "keep calm and carry on". Again, I'm merely using it to illustrate an approach, not saying we should replicate the conditions under which that phrase was conceived.

                • anigbrowl 12 years ago

                  Terrorists are in short supply, while methods of attack are essentially unlimited. Effective counterterrorism will attack what's in short supply. In other words, it needs to look for terrorists, not attempt to stop every single conceivable method of attack.

                  As you are surely aware, we don't have a reliable method for distinguishing terrorists from everyone else, notwithstanding the best efforts of intelligence agencies engaged in various sorts of spying. Targeting particular attack vectors is of course less than ideal, but if one receives a credible tip along the lines of 'agent X will attempt to transport a 'battery bomb' onto a US bound flight this month' then you can't blame security services for trying to leverage that information. There may even be a second-order purpose for announcing it publicly, eg to instill paranoia among potential terrorists about the leakiness of their OpSec or suchlike. So no, I don't think that such specific directives are necessarily pointless.

                  How many countries have carried out something as catastrophically stupid as the 2003 invasion of Iraq in response to a terrorist attack? If you want a country that took a milder approach to terrorism, given that, I'd say "all of them".

                  I might point out that the UK, and a lot of other countries joined in the invasion of Iraq. As for Guantanamo bay, I don't think that's an appropriate comparison. Most people held there were either captured in Afghanistan and a few kidnapped and subjected to 'extraordinary rendition', of them in the context of a hot war. I'm talking about people arrested on suspicion of terrorism, ie neither the Tsarnev guy in Boston nor any of the various would-be terrorists nabbed by the FBI over recent years have been sent to Guantanamo (despite calls for that some ultraconservatives). In terms of judicial process, they're subject to the same regime as any other person detained on suspicion of criminal activity.

                  In fact, the UK government did imprison a group of men indefinitely and without charge post 9-11 (although the law in question was overturned a few years later because it was in conflict with EU human rights law): http://www.liberty-human-rights.org.uk/human-rights/counteri... Britain is about make some legal history with its first secret trial (http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2014/06/12/core_of_uk_terr...). Looking farther back, for several decades Britain dealt with its terrorism problem in Northern Ireland by removing the right to a jury trial for many offenses (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diplock_courts) and for a number of years by internment (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Demetrius - note that almost 2000 people were held prisoner without trial, quite a few more than Guantanamo Bay ever held).

                  Now, I wouldn't expect you to know all this - I grew up over there so it's easy for me to cite examples. But instead of rudely asking me if I've ever heard of Guantanamo Bay, perhaps you might acknowledge the possibility that I know what I'm talking about. I could dredge up a variety of examples from other countries in various stages of socioeconomic development, but since the UK shares a language and a common legal heritage with the US it seemed like the most obvious point of comparison. I stand by my argument that the US response to terrorism, while of questionable effectiveness, is not nearly as unusual as you seem to think. Indeed, in comparison with prior actions of the US it's fairly mild, sad to say; consider the Japanese internment of WW2, or historical punitive campaigns that would be regarded as genocidal war crimes today, such as the Phillipine-American war of 1899-1902, or for that matter the Vietnam war. Historical awfulness is no justification for bad governance today, but nor are today's problems as bad as you suggest.

  • Zigurd 12 years ago

    "Bomb scanners" are really density scanners. If someone were able to make explosives that worked but were not the same density and known explosives, they would not have to hide them in batteries. The x-ray machines would not "see" them no matter how they were packed.

    As other people have pointed out, the only use this order has is to prevent uncharged batteries from stopping the inspection of the data on a device.

  • mikeash 12 years ago

    Just buy a laptop that can hold two batteries but run off of one (e.g. ThinkPad T440) and replace one with a bomb. Computer still powers on with no modifications to any electronics.

stcredzero 12 years ago

How about taking out the guts of a 17" Dell XPS laptop and connecting its screen to the insides of a Sony Vaio ultrabook or a Macbook Air? That would give you over a quart of volume in which to pack contraband.

  • adamnemecek 12 years ago

    Or a raspberry pi type computer. You'd have plenty of space.

    I hope this comment didn't put me on some watch list.

  • Mvandenbergh 12 years ago

    That would be obvious on an x-ray.

    • stcredzero 12 years ago

      Not necessarily. Since the Macbook Air doesn't have a hard drive, you could disguise some kinds of contraband as the batteries, hard drive, and CD drive. Newer X-Ray machines might have the configurations of known laptops known by the software, but I doubt the personnel would be able to tell the difference if some effort is made to disguise the x-ray images.

      • VLM 12 years ago

        "might have the configurations of known laptops known by the software"

        Given the sheer quantity of hardware thats ever existed and the workflow I don't think this is a serious possibility.

        I know pretty much every piece of ham radio gear every constructed has at one point gone thru the xray for "dxpedition" people. Along with pretty much all consumer electronics. It would be a heck of a lot simpler to mod a COTS radio from Radio Shack.

  • icpmacdo 12 years ago

    or a raspberry pi and a small battery.

bogrollben 12 years ago

Tomorrow's headlines: Passengers forced to crap in a bag to prove they aren't hiding explosives.

fit2rule 12 years ago

If everyone on the plane has their working cell phone on, then thats more data that can be collected during the flight .. over international waters .. from all of the targets of most interest (those moving between countries).

Honestly I won't even be mad if this were the case.

izacus 12 years ago

Well, good thing that after long days of traveling we never arrive at the airport with any of our electronic devices empty -_-

Also... does anyone know how many people were caught trying to smuggle explosives on a plain until now?

  • rdtsc 12 years ago

    > does anyone know how many people were caught trying to smuggle explosives on a plain until now?

    I believe exactly 0 caught by TSA. Given their job performance they should have all been fired by now and the department closed.

    FBI and even regular passengers have in 10 years or so caught and stopped some terrorists. TSA hasn't claimed a single person they stopped red-handed with a bomb.

    All they did was waste years and years of productive time, abused, molested people, stole goods expensive and cheap alike and so on.

    It is a self-perpetuating cancer (not unlike any other large organization) that now that it has been created will come up with further excuses to stay in business.

    At least FBI is smart enough once a while to find some feeble minded brain-washable idiot and entrap him (groom him) to make him buy chemicals for explosives and then claim "oh look we have prevented deh terrorism!" and throw the idiot in prison for life.

    TSA isn't even competent to do those false flag like activities. It is a pure cancer spreading and consuming resources.

  • VLM 12 years ago

    The assumption is all hollywood style bomb plots.

    The somewhat more realistic problem is steal one of the zillions of fake plastic cellphones from zillions of cell phone retail stores, fill it with coke (the sniffing kind, not the drinking kind) and carry it across. Well, the drug sniffing dogs might get agitated about that. Prescription pills, perhaps.

shmerl 12 years ago

This is getting increasingly stupid.

  • coldcode 12 years ago

    I've always called the TSA Terminally Stupid Administration. Yet they continue to amaze.

watwut 12 years ago

It is supposed to be easier to put a bomb inside Phones and Samsung Galaxy then into any other kind of box? Is here anyone skilled in bomb making willing to explain?

  • x1798DE 12 years ago

    Not that it matters (since none of these "security" measures pass anything even close to a cost-benefit analysis anyway), but you could imagine that phones or laptops would make particularly good bomb hiding places for a certain kind of bomb, because they're already packed with electronics, so it would be easy enough to replace the battery with plastic explosives and hide a detonator among the rest of the electronics there.

    Of course, as people have pointed out, you could rig the battery itself to explode, or if you just need to turn the thing on, you could replace 95% of the battery with explosives and just leave enough power to turn it on and off. Like I said, it doesn't make any real sense, but there's a superficial argument for doing it this way.

crishoj 12 years ago

Rationale being? – Validate the integrity of the device from looking at the screen? – Obtain an electronic record of the device entering the country?

  • ghkbrew 12 years ago

    > Validate the integrity of the device from looking at the screen?

    Essentially, yeah. If you can't turn it on, it could be an IED disguised as a cellphone. (Or so the TSA seems to think)

    Of course it's all just pointless security theater. I keep waiting for the general public to realize that these sorts of measures are useless wastes of money and demand they stop. I fear I'll have a long wait.

    (Edit: TSA not NTSB)

    • amatix 12 years ago

      Or if you're even a wee bit sophisticated, get a smaller battery pack that'll last for 15 minutes and pack your explosives into the remaining 90% of battery space? How does the TSA not think of these blindingly obvious things?

      • mikeash 12 years ago

        "It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it!"

        Nobody is going to put themselves out of a job by saying, "Ubiquitous security screening doesn't work, as every countermeasure we come up with has obvious counter-countermeasures. Thus, we should shrink this agency by a factor of five and refocus our efforts in other areas."

        But they can't just ignore threats either, because that gets you hauled in front of Congress the next time something happens. Thus, they ride a line of carrying out countermeasures that don't really help, but which are enough so that they can go to Congress and say that they did everything they could.

  • ddebernardy 12 years ago

    Possibly: that lithium batteries can turn into wild explosive fires.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-07-22/lithium-power-seen-...

Mandatum 12 years ago

Wouldn't this be in relation to scanning/reading data on the devices rather than explosives? Having to charge a phone or laptop would increase time taken for processing as you'll need to charge the item momentarily whilst you interface with it.. I highly doubt they open up phones/laptops to connect directly to the HDD..

turar 12 years ago

Now someone just needs to setup autonomous charging stations next to security checkpoints and rake in the dough.

mootothemax 12 years ago

This makes me wonder: what if terrorists start attacking the screening/security areas themselves?

They've already succeeded in making air travel vastly more painful than it has any real right to be.

I can only imagine the chaos if an extra, pre-security-area screening is introduced.

  • anigbrowl 12 years ago

    They might do so someday, but it has been explained time and again why this is not a very effective strategy: it will hit a relatively small number of people, it will be in an enclosed area so media access and thus graphic coverage will be limited, and airports are uniquely well-provisioned with emergency services because of the non-negligible risk of plane crashes, which will limit the impact. So the 'return on risk' for the terrorist is relatively low - it would scare people and put them off flying for a bit, but it wouldn't be an epic disaster.

    Realistically it would be hard to kill more than 25-50 people, and the media coverage would consist of footage of ambulances, sober-faced people in uniform, and crying friends and relatives. Look at the history of conflicts where bombings were common, like Northern Ireland, and you notice that crowds don't necessarily mean mass casualties. The most deadly bomb set off during the Irish troubles was at an outdoor market in a town called Omagh, and killed 29 people - but that was a car bomb. Also, in a terrestrial bombing there are also tales of heroism as people help each other, emergency services turn up to help, and so on, which dilutes the sense of horror and helplessness. You could see that with the Boston bombing last year, which was ultimately more effective in drawing people together than it was in terrorizing them.

    A plane blowing or otherwise falling out of the sky is a much bigger deal, because it will almost certainly mean the death of everyone on board, plus it has the potential to cause considerable destruction on the ground. Even excluding terrorism, there was high awareness of the Air France plane that crashed in the Atlantic and of course the Malaysian Airlines plane that mysteriously vanished earlier this year. In a terrestrial bombing, you might be unlucky and die, but you might also be lucky and suffer only superficial injuries, or be able to make it to safety, or whatever. In an aerial disaster you and everyone else are basically helpless because if the initial disaster doesn't kill you the fall will. Situations involving helplessness and inevitability are a great deal more frightening to people in general, more so when multiplied by a large number of people.

    • mootothemax 12 years ago

      For what it's worth, the BBC bombing by one of the IRA splinter groups shook my then-house's windows, and I've been evacuated before that for IRA bomb warnings.

      Maybe that's shaping my views when I think that the number of deaths isn't the only goal of terrorism. Rather, it's to scare and inconvenience people and the authorities.

      Let's say "only" 20 people died. I think that would result in yet more security checks. I'd love to be wrong on this, and maybe that's why an attack like this hasn't happened to date - to paraphrase you, it'd be pointless.

      I guess looking at it coldly, we should just be thankful that the on-the-ground expertise dies in every attack.

    • mikeash 12 years ago

      I don't quite buy it. The Boston bombs were extremely amateur and small, and yet they managed to shut down the entire city for a day. A big rolling suitcase full of powerful explosives and shrapnel set off in a security line at peak time in a large airport would be way worse. And if that's not enough, do it again, and again. One security line bombing a month until the end of time would be fairly easy and would cause complete chaos.

      The real reason this doesn't happen is that there are almost no terrorists in the US in the first place. There is plenty of opportunity, whether it's airport security lines, sporting events, or simply using one of the sixteen thousand trivial ways to get contraband past the TSA. The only reason planes aren't constantly falling out of the sky and our airports aren't all smoking craters is that essentially nobody is truly willing to carry out such attacks in the first place.

      • anigbrowl 12 years ago

        Your arguments are not really responsive.

        A big rolling suitcase full of powerful explosives and shrapnel set off in a security line at peak time in a large airport would be way worse.

        I gave you an example of a car bomb that killed only 30 people even though it was set off in a crowded market. Have you ever seen a car bomb go off? I have, it's huge. What's your basis for assuming that a suitcase bomb is going to be so much more devastating?

        Certainly there is plenty of opportunity, but you're making a chicken-and-egg argument by saying there's very little terrorism, therefore security is a waste of time. I'm saying that that the payoff for the risk involved is not enough for most people.

        And if that's not enough, do it again, and again. One security line bombing a month until the end of time would be fairly easy and would cause complete chaos.

        I mentioned the northern Irish terrorist problem because I'm from Ireland and later lived in London. One bombing a month does not cause complete chaos, it just pisses people off and creates more public support for stiffer security measures, more intrusive surveillance and so on.

        I suggest you step back from your assumptions of what would happen and look at available documentation of what actually does happen in countries with long-running insurgencies or terrorist problems, from the UK to Sri Lanka to Colombia, cases of actual disasters (whether engineered or accidental) at airports and public transit hubs.

        • mikeash 12 years ago

          The suitcase bomb was compared to the ridiculous pressure cooker bombs used in Boston, not car bombs. I did not state that they'd be worse than a big car bomb. I did not make any such comparison.

          You misunderstand my argument. I'm not saying that there's very little terrorism, therefore security is a waste of time. I'm saying that many of our security measures are a waste of time because they don't stop terrorism, and I say this because they're trivial to bypass. That terrorism is so rare in this country is not because of agencies like TSA, but because there are approximately no terrorists to be stopped in the first place.

          In places where there are a lot of terrorists, they carry out bombings pretty regularly. Regardless of whether you think it's effective, they clearly do. Yet they don't do it in the US. And it's not because TSA is stopping them, nor is anybody else set up to stop those sorts of attacks that regularly happen in places like Iraq. The only reasonable conclusion is that they don't happen because nobody here wants to carry them out.

splike 12 years ago

I don't understand, what has the phone being charged got to do with anything?

  • wging 12 years ago

    If your device is charged you can prove it actually works; if it's not, you can say "Well, it works, but it happens not to be charged--that's why it isn't doing anything."

    Presumably the idea is that techniques used to convert a laptop or phone into a bomb would render the device inoperable. It certainly seems like a harder task to make a bomb that is also a phone, rather than a bomb that used to be a phone.

  • mahyarm 12 years ago

    Uncharged phones could be hidden explosives. To prove it's a electronic device, you have to turn it on. But it's kind of moot if you just explode the battery directly right?

  • delinka 12 years ago

    Presumably, when security asks random passengers at random times to activate their mobile devices as proof that they're not some incendiary device, this rule eliminates the passenger's ability to claim it doesn't work because it's not fully charged. Plugging Yet Another Security Hole that terrorists could use!

    How they plan to mitigate phones with bad batteries I have no idea- it's fully charged coming through security, but 30 minutes later, it's completely dead? Must be a terrerist [sic].

  • jeangenie 12 years ago

    Tin foil hat meme: they want the ability to surreptitiously power on and root devices. This only works if it's juiced.

    • ilikepi 12 years ago

      To add to your meme, turning on a phone also gets the device to ping out for cell towers, adding a data point to a large database out in the Utah dessert...

  • 14113 12 years ago

    It's to prove that it's a genuine phone/laptop, and not one with the internals replaced with explosives.

  • lemming 12 years ago

    If it's not charged, you can't turn it on to show it's actually a phone.

wardb 12 years ago

I feel so safe now everybody sitting in my plane have charged iPhone's & Galaxy's.

Always expected that people who 'loaned' my iOS lightning charger where terrorist.

jokoon 12 years ago

well just plug its charger and turn it on...

  • narcissus 12 years ago

    I hope that is going to be acceptable: my laptop is way too old for my battery to hold a charge, and I really only use it when I'm on the road. I'd hate to have to buy a new one simply to get it on the plane :(

    • jhgg 12 years ago

      If your laptop's too old to hold a charge, is there really a reason to bring it on the plane with you? Just check it in and hope they don't wreck it.

      • xtrumanx 12 years ago

        > ...is there really a reason to bring it on the plane with you? Just check it in and hope they don't wreck it.

        That's exactly the reason why I bring stuff in with me. If they're valuable or fragile, I would never check it in.

twobits 12 years ago

I really really need to see your private data. ..Fascist state par excellence. ..Unfortunately, it exports its "democracy" all around.

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