| Airlines Don't Want You to Know They Sold Your Flight Data to DHS 
 ....The   Statement of Work says that TIP can show a person’s paid intent to   travel and tickets purchased through travel agencies in the U.S. and its   territories. The data from the Travel Intelligence Program (TIP) will   provide “visibility on a subject’s or person of interest’s domestic air   travel ticketing information as well as tickets acquired through travel   agencies in the U.S. and its territories,” the documents say. They add   this data will be “crucial” in both administrative and criminal cases.
 
 A  DHS Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) available online   says that TIP data is updated daily with the previous day’s ticket   sales, and contains more than one billion records spanning 39 months of   past and future travel. The document says TIP can be searched by name,   credit card, or airline, but ARC contains data from ARC-accredited   travel agencies, such as Expedia, and not flights booked directly with   an airline. “f the passenger buys a ticket directly from the airline,   then the search done by ICE will not show up in an ARC report,” that   PIA says. The PIA notes the data impacts both U.S. and non-U.S. persons,   meaning it does include information on U.S. citizens.
 
 “While   obtaining domestic airline data—like many other transaction and   purchase records—generally doesn't require a warrant, there's still   supposed to go through a legal process that ensures independent   oversight and limits data collection to records that will support an   investigation,” Jake Laperruque, deputy director of the Center for   Democracy & Technology's Security and Surveillance Project, told 404   Media in an email. “As with many other types of sensitive and revealing   data, the government seems intent on using data brokers to buy their   way around important guardrails and limits.”
 
 CBP’s contract with ARC started in June 2024 and may extend to 2029,......
 
 404media.co
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