people in charge at the time, which was not jack dorsey, because he was off in french polynesia, in the south pacific, it was left to others to determine if he should be kicked off. john: new concerns before millions of americans hit the skies, a brand-new tsa program sounds a little bit like something that you might see coming from communist china. brand-new technology scans people s faces at checkpoints, sparking concerns over privacy and whether or not data is safe and might be used elsewhere. madison alworth reporting live from newark international, what are fliers saying? we have been talking to travelers all day long, and right now in the test mode and voluntary, they see it s where the technology is going, and yes makes them uncomfortable but
also seems to be inevitable. take a listen. a little concerned. if it s just for travel, i get it. but anything else, that s a little bit privacy invasion. a whole lot faster, i hate standing and waiting. i could see it cause some concern. we are getting surveillance everywhere, though. we will get more and more comfortable with this kind of stuff, roll with it, it s going to happen anyway. you kind of hear that really just resigned that this is the next step, and like i said, it is in test mode right now at airports across the country. screenings, known as cat 2, it involves scanning your face when you get to the tsa checkpoint and the officer compares it with the image on your travel documents, whether it be your passport or your driver s license. rolled out nationwide as early as next year. the tsa defending the program saying participation in the testing of biometric technology is completely voluntary. passengers may notify an officer
Heute wird ein Wasserstoffzug des Herstellers Alstom auf seine maximale Reichweite getestet. Bislang ist noch nicht ausprobiert worden, wie weit ein solcher Zug mit einer Tankfüllung kommt.