The article does note that this whole system does carry the risk of extremely long delays if there is a hitch in the IT system.Your treasured and travel-weary passport may soon become, like your first mobile phone, a relic of the past, if border agencies from the UK to Singapore, the United Arab Emirates and our own have anything to do with it.The race is on to create a system whereby travellers will no longer need to present their documents to either a border official or passport kiosk.
For the Australian traveller, this could mean the days of standing in line at our international airports will end.
In related news, in the USA today, we get this:
Licence plate images and photos of individuals who travelled in and out of the United States were taken in a malicious hack impacting U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), according to a report in the Washington Post. The agency learned last month about the breach, which took place thanks to a hack of an unnamed subcontractor.I wonder about the point of such a hack...
CBP, which blamed the subcontractor for failing to follow security and privacy rules by transferring the agency’s photos to its own network, operates a database of visa and passport photos as part of a face recognition system and database used widely at American airports despite criticism for privacy and accuracy failures. The agency processes over 1 million travellers per day and is building up to use the face recognition system in at least 20 airports thanks to a Trump executive order.
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