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Humanities Legal Studies Topic started by: Laura09 on Aug 8, 2017



Title: How does technology contribute to homeland security, and how does it make us more vulnerable? ...
Post by: Laura09 on Aug 8, 2017
How does technology contribute to homeland security, and how does it make us more vulnerable? Explain your answer.


Title: Re: How does technology contribute to homeland security, and how does it make us more vulnerable? ...
Post by: psyche360 on Aug 9, 2017
How does Technology Contribute to Homeland Security, and How Does it Make Us More Vulnerable?

Biometric Federal ID Cards Behind Schedule
Texas Border Webcams Fall Short
Is In-Flight Internet A Terrorist Threat?
TSA Can’t Reset PINs on Thousands of Transportation Workers Identification Credential
Videogame Technology (“Depiction”) Helps With Disaster Planning
DHS Plans Body Odor Biometrics
DHS Tests Brain Music for Emergency Workers
TSA Scraps Puffing Bomb Detectors
Blimps for Cellphone Relay and Surveillance
U. of Illinois Studies ‘Second Life’ for Emergency Training
Defense Agency Plans EMP-Resistant Network
Pentagon Wants Cyborg Insects to Detect Chemicals
DHS and States Test ‘Virtual USA’ for Real-Time View of Emergencies
Chip Turns Phones Into Chemical Detectors
Iraqis Intercept U.S. Drone Videos

A few months after September 11, 2001, a writer for Atlantic was waiting for a flight at Seattle’s airport. As he checked in, “someone ran through the metal detector and disappeared onto the little subway that runs among the terminals.”

Authorities emptied all the terminals and rescreened everyone, including people who had already boarded the airplane.

Something similar happened on Sunday, January 3, 2010 at the Newark airport. A man went the wrong way through the exit door, triggering delays, evacuations, rescreening and “seven hours of chaos… on one of the busiest days of the year.”

Airport security – as this example and Northwest 253 illustrate – is an example of a homeland security technology that, when it fails, fails badly.

Bruce Schneier, a security technologist, suggests all security technology should be subject to two basic questions: “What problem does it solve? What problems does it cause, especially when it fails?”