Maggie’s How much are you paying…

lash

Swamp Rat
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Sep 28, 2012
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…to the government so that they can search your travel records? Yes, they use your tax dollars to buy billions of searchable travel records and have been since 2011. Your favorite airline is part owner of a company that compiles all travel records and then sells it to governments.

Article from Malwarebytes Labs:


Airline data broker selling 5 billion passenger records to US government​

Posted: September 17, 2025 by Danny Bradbury
We already knew that the US airline industry gave the government access to passenger records. However, this week it emerged that at least five billion passenger records are being sold to government agencies via a searchable database—far more than was initially believed.
A few weeks ago, investigative research team 404 Media reported on a secretive relationshipbetween many US airlines and the US government. That story showed that the airlines had sold US agencies access to around a billion records.
Now, researchers have found the data broker that collects flight data from the airline industry has made at least five billion records available to federal agencies.
The organization selling the data is the Airlines Reporting Corporation (ARC), which is owned and operated by at least eight US airlines. It sells the government this data under the Travel Intelligence Program (TIP), which was started after the 2001 attack on the World Trade Center.
ARC provides access to a searchable database of at least five billion records, updated daily with new ticketing information. At least one agency, the US Secret Service, has a contract to access this data, paying $885,000 for data through 2028, according to documents obtained by 404 Media.

Known clients​

In June, 404 Media found that ARC had been making names, flight itineraries, and financial details available to US agencies, which were forbidden from revealing it as the source, under contract. The data included flights booked via 12,800 travel agencies, which submit ticket sales from over 270 carriers globally to ARC.
Originally developed as a financial clearing house, ARC provides payment settlement services for federal agencies and airlines. Known clients include Customs and Border Protection, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Travel dates and credit card numbers are available to federal customers, which also include the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the US Marshals Service.

A long history of sharing data​

The US airline industry has a long history of interacting with the US government. In 1996, Al Gore’s White House Commission on Aviation Safety and Security recommendedautomated screening for better flight security. A year later, most North American airlines voluntarily implemented what became known as the Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System (CAPPS). After the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) took over CAPPS, it built a system called CAPPS II, which used security color-coding for flight passengers. That system ran into trouble after several airlines admitted to giving the US government access to passenger data.
American Airlines reportedly confessed to making passengers’ records available in the early 2000s, as did United, while Northwest also gave NASA access to millions of passenger records. These relationships enabled data mining work at government agencies involving passenger records. A US General Accounting Office (GAO) report in 2004 found that CAPPS II was behind schedule, in part because it had failed to address privacy concerns.
“One air carrier initially agreed to provide passenger data for testing purposes, but adverse publicity resulted in its withdrawal from participation. Similar situations occurred for the other two potential data providers,” the report said. “TSA’s attempts to obtain test data are still ongoing, and privacy issues remain a stumbling block.”
The TSA canned CAPPS II that year, switching instead to a system called Secure Flight. This also implemented a color-coded security system for passengers and uses the US government’s No-Fly list.
The information that ARC funnels to the US government reportedly comes only from travel agencies, meaning that direct bookings with airlines hopefully won’t be logged in this way. Passengers might want to consider that when making travel plans.”
 
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A better question is why would the government pay for something they could get for free?
It’s all compiled and in a searchable database already. That’s always worth something. It’s the difference between a short couple minute search versus days of digging to try and find something/someone.

In a properly compiled search database, I could come up with a persons’ complete travel history in minutes. Most government records are set up horrendously and are often decades behind the times.
 
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I forget, did you use a credit card to buy the ticket? Cell phone for boarding passes? Everyone already knows all the details of your travel.

I walked off the plane from Europe last year and the Customs guy said, "Hi LGM welcome back." All with a scan of my face that I had given no one permission to take.
 
I'm going out on a limb here, but I'll bet the government doesn't use any of its money to pay for this.
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I forget, did you use a credit card to buy the ticket? Cell phone for boarding passes? Everyone already knows all the details of your travel.

I walked off the plane from Europe last year and the Customs guy said, "Hi LGM welcome back." All with a scan of my face that I had given no one permission to take.
Uh huh, yep. And just how do you think they know all that? Magic? Read the post right above yours by @GreenGO Juan .