• Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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    13 hours ago

    Regardless, someone did try to blow up a plane with explosives hidden in their shoe. It’s a very well documented incident.

    After that incident. Security was stepped up globally, we had to start putting shoes to be xrayed, and we never saw a single case of anyone trying to smuggle explosives on board in their shoe ever again.

    If it’s removed completely, it’s because they have other methods that make it obsolete.

    Aviation rarely make the same mistake twice (Boeing goes hold my beer).

    When I was a kid, I got to step inside the cockpit and say hello to the pilots and look at all the instruments, mid flight. After my grandmother asked if that was ok. Fat chance of that ever happening again after 9-11

    • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      Yeah the method was the newer scanners they are using. Most of them are like this:

      https://mdtsecurity.cc/solutions-products/l3-security-detection-systems/provision2/

      It does a 360 degree scan of you like a CT machine (but using mm waves, instead of X-rays and such)

      Automatic Target Detection (ATD)

      Quickly screens passengers for a broad variety of aviation targets both metallic and non-metallic: weapons, standard and home-made explosives (sheet and bulk), liquids, gels, plastics, powders, metals, ceramics, and other objects

      And unless I keep my legs spread while waiting in line, it nearly always triggers my groin because to much warmth. So they do a nice personal check with their hands just in case feeling the creases (Has happened to me 3 times out of 5) I run hotter than most people though

      • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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        13 hours ago

        Yeah I’ve seen those. I think… I know I’ve seen what looks like that. But if the technology inside is updated I can’t say I know. Never had a problem with my balls being too warm in them. And I can’t recall ever having my shoes on inside. Always had to put them aside. But that could easily just be airport policy at the time.

        Anyhow… what irked me was the post acting like scanning shoes was some fake phony security scam. Almost every single airline and airport policy is there for a reason.

        E.g. after the Lockerby tragedy. Airlines had to make sure that every single bag has a passenger that is on board the plane. As someone had checked in a bag with explosives, and then never boarded himself.

        • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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          13 hours ago

          That’s what changed here, is you can wear the shoes into these machines now basically. Because they know the machines are already scanning for w.e, and it is coming up on their screens that they are reviewing, so the only question for them was does an organic foot in the shoe cause any interference, which I presume it did not.

          That and if you applied for TSA pre check… you could skip taking your shoes off. And that started in 2013. So if you could pass a basic background check before you got to the airport, they allowed you to bypass it. Which made people wonder … well why is anyone doing it

          • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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            10 hours ago

            I don’t know exactly how TSA works, I have not flown that much within the US. But I agree that’s pretty bullshit.