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Friday, May 31, 2013

TSA eliminates all invasive X-ray machines

NBC News, Ben Popken

Transportation Security Administration Security Officer Nyamsi Tchapleu looks at
images created by a "backscatter" scanner during a demonstration at the
 Transportation Security Administration's Systems Integration Facility at Ronald
Reagan National Airport December 30, 2009 in Arlington, Virginia.

The Transportation Security Administration announced it has finished removing from all airports the X-ray technology that produced graphic and controversial images of passengers passing through security screening checkpoints. 

An image released by the TSA showing
 how the new passenger screenings will
appear to operators.
In a letter released Thursday, TSA administrator John Pistole told the House Homeland Security committee that as of May 16, all US airports scanners equipped with the ability to produce the penetrating images will now only show a generic outline of a passenger to the operator. A colored box pops up if the full-body scanner detects a potentially forbidden item.

The TSA beat their deadline by two weeks for modifying the scanners. The technology was originally mandated to be removed by June 2012 under the Federal Aviation Administration's Modernization and Reform Act of 2012, but the deadline was extended to May 31, 2013.

The machines, which the TSA first deployed in 2008, provoked public outrage as the technology, better able than traditional X-rays to detect hidden contraband, also created images that appeared as if they were "virtual nudes." Critics called this an invasion of privacy and questioned whether the scanning devices truly lacked the ability to save the images, as the TSA claimed.

Scientists have revealed flaws in the controversial full
body-scanners

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