Travel

Always question the assertion that your privacy is protected

Last week my CBC radio column covered the recent introduction of a 3D imaging surveillance system used at the Kelowna BC airport to screen passengers. Using millimetre waves the system is able to penetrate clothing and create a vivid 3D model of the passenger without clothes on. Thus it is a far more thorough system then the existing setup which only scans for metal.

Part of the focus of the column was on the privacy implications of such a system, and at the time CATSA (the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority) was claiming it had the support of the federal privacy commissioner. I mentioned this in my column, but also expressed skepticism that the current steps being taken to protect passenger's privacy was not enough.

Turns out, the privacy commissioner does not support the pilot project, and does indeed have concerns with how passengers privacy might be violated. Here's a quote from the Globe and Mail:

"However, the privacy commissioner's office said yesterday it is concerned about the implications of the new system and it never told CATSA officials that the body-scanning technology meets Canadian privacy standards.

"At this very early stage we certainly don't know enough to endorse the project, so the suggestion that we endorsed it is perhaps a bit off," commission spokeswoman Anne-Marie Hayden said. "I think we're going to have to watch it closely and we're going to want to ensure that individuals' privacy rights are protected."

Thanks to Blair Campbell for alerting me to this. Goes to show that even when an organization says it is protecting your privacy you should still question that assertion, and try and think of unforeseen ways in your rights my be violated.

Texas continues to attack Ontario and the North East

There's something about the weather that fascinates me. I'm always looking at the weather page my buddy Ken Chase has setup, and I'm often outside observing conditions and comparing what I see and experience with the online forecasts.

Thanksgiving in Chicago and Hip Hop is Dead according to Nas

Emily and I made our annual trip to Chicago this past weekend for American Thanksgiving. Explicitly we go to Palatine Illinois to visit Emily's grandfather Fred Pohl, and other members of the maternal side of her family. The last two years have been road trips as we've driven from Toronto to Chicago. Last year the weather was nasty, with all sorts of conditions ranging from fog, to snow, ice, rain, sleet, hail, you name it.

A Fall Road Trip to Maine

Recently, to celebrate Emily finishing the first draft of her second Natalie Fuentes novel, we took a quick road trip out to the Atlantic Coast of New Hampshire and Maine. I'm really getting into doing long drives, and we went at just the right time as the colours of the leaves were perfect.

Rush hour: what are suburban commuters thinking?

This is the first video that I made with my Nokia e70 camera phone. Emily and I were driving against rush hour traffic to go visit her dad at the Trillium hospital in Mississauga. We were both amazed at how totally clogged the QEW was, and thus made this short video expressing just that!


A Southern Road Trip with Little Red

After years as a militant cyclist and pedestrian I finally got my driver's license last August. Since then Emily and I have been on a few road trips.

Our first was to visit Eric in NYC, celebrating his engagement, and then wedding. Our second was to Chicago, for American Thanksgiving, at the house of Sci-Fi legend Fred Pohl (a/k/a Emily's Grandfather).

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