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Old 09-23-2006, 12:25 PM   #1
xoxoxoBruce
The future is unwritten
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 71,105
European Effort to Stop Hijacks

I don't see these efforts actually in common use for 15 years, but at least the effort is being made. Hijack proof is, of course, a misnomer. Anything man can build, another man can circumvent, but making it harder is always good.... unless the pilot locks himself out of the cockpit, mid flight.
Quote:
Leading European aerospace companies began working together on an airline security project in 2004 and are making progress with systems to help produce the first hijack-proof plane.
The SAFEE project, which stands for Security of Aircraft in the Future European Environment, aims to create a series of technological innovations to prevent 'a repeat of Sept 11', says project coordinator Daniel Gaultier.

These include microphones and cameras to monitor passengers in the cabin, digital fingerprints and iris scans for access to the cockpit, and an avoidance system to prevent planes crashing into buildings. All are designed to make hijacking an airliner in mid-flight virtually impossible.

Not on the list, however, is the oft-mentioned idea of piloting planes from the ground by remote control. Mr Gaultier describes this as futurism, noting that it presents 'huge difficulties in regulation and in securing the signal'.

Instead, the 31 companies participating in SAFEE, launched in 2004 by the European Commission, are looking at more viable alternatives.
Airbus, BAE Systems, Thales, Sagem and NLR have each taken charge of one of five main initiatives.

In Hamburg, Germany in August, Airbus carried out the first tests on its 'threat detection system', which warns the pilot of any suspicious behaviour by a passenger via a system of cameras and microphones. A full simulation is planned for January 2008.

Thales, meanwhile, is working on an anti-collision system to be tested in June 2007, Mr Gaultier said.

Developing biometric fingerprinting to ensure that only crew members can enter the cockpit, has been entrusted to Dutch firm NLR, which plans to test the system in August 2007 in Amsterdam.

Mr Gaultier's company, Sagem Defense Securite, part of the Safran group, is working on protecting data systems, in particular on communications between the cockpit and control tower.

The total budget for SAFEE is 36 million euros (S$72.13 million), 19 million of which have been put up by the European Commission.

The five companies involved in the project aim to give a joint demonstration of their achievements in February 2008, 'to show that it works', said Marco Brusati, head of project at the European Commission. After that, a new seven-year contract should be signed to bring the project to completion.

According to Mr Brusati, 'there will be no products on the market before 2010. The whole package could be available on planes in operation from around 2015'. Developing the new equipment poses legal and ethical as well as technological problems. You cannot film passengers on board planes or record their conversations except within a strict legal framework. But it is possible, says Mr Gaultier, 'provided you destroy the recordings at the end of the flight'.
The other stumbling block, Mr Gaultier notes, is the 'exorbitant' cost of fitting the new technology to existing planes. 'Doubtless it would be better to think about incorporating them into the next generation of aircraft,' he says.
If the airlines say, up front, were going film you inflight for safety reasons, if you don't want to be filmed, don't fly, I don't see a problem. Am I missing something?
I wonder if the video/audio feed would be transmitted to the ground? The air crew has enough to do without monitoring that video. By the time a bad guy's actions become overt, it may be too late. It's the subtle things that tip off trouble in advance.

They could make a few bucks selling commemorative souvenir videos to passengers that joined the mile high club.
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