- Oct 14, 2005
- 9,711
- 6
- 76
Naked-Image Scanners to Be Removed From U.S. Airports
So a failed experiment wasting taxpayer dollars. How many lives did this save compared to invade? Anyways, a longstanding TSA intrusion comes to an abrupt and relatively quiet end.
The U.S. Transportation Security Administration will remove airport body scanners that privacy advocates likened to strip searches after OSI Systems Inc. (OSIS) couldnt write software to make passenger images less revealing.
TSA will end a $5 million contract with OSIs Rapiscan unit for the software after Administrator John Pistole concluded the company couldnt meet a congressional deadline to produce generic passenger images, agency officials said in interviews.
The agency removed 76 of the machines from busier U.S. airports last year. It will now get rid of the remaining 174 Rapiscan machines, with the company absorbing the cost, said Karen Shelton Waters, the agencys assistant administrator for acquisitions. The TSA will use 60 machines manufactured by L-3 Communications Holdings Inc. (LLL), the agencys other supplier of body scanners, and will move some scanners to busier airports to reduce waiting times.
So a failed experiment wasting taxpayer dollars. How many lives did this save compared to invade? Anyways, a longstanding TSA intrusion comes to an abrupt and relatively quiet end.