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I'm boycotting Cathay Pacific, Cathay Dragon, and HK Express. | |
August 02nd, 2019 | |
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The following was posted on BoingBoing earlier today | |
When airline seatback entertainment systems started to come bundled with | |
little webcams, airlines were quick to disavow their usage, promising | |
that the cameras were only installed for potential future video- | |
conferncing or gaming apps, and not to allow the crew or airline to spy | |
on passengers in their seats. | |
Enter Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific, the country's flagship airline, which | |
has just amended its privacy policy to reveal that it is recording its | |
passengers as they fly, as well as gathering data on how individual | |
passengers spend time in airport terminals, and even brokered data on | |
their use of rivals' hotel and airplane loyalty programs. | |
But don't worry, the company promises it will take "commercially | |
reasonable" cybersecurity measures to keep all that data from leaking. | |
Separately and in unrelated news, Cathay Pacific insists that it was | |
using "commerically reasonable" measures when it suffered the fucking | |
massive data breach it suffered last year (up to 9.4 million customers | |
affected!). So I'm sure it'll be fine. | |
> According to a new report from Forbes, the Hong Kong flag carrier has | |
> amended its official personal data collection policy to allow the air- | |
> line to compile a database with detailed information on passengers’ use | |
> of in-flight entertainment systems (IFE) – including, but not limited | |
> to, images recorded by seatback cameras, customers’ activities at air- | |
> port terminals and even data obtained about membership activity in | |
> competing hotel and airline loyalty programs. The airline further says | |
> that the collected data will be possessed by the company for “as long | |
> as necessary.” | |
> | |
> The airline is also making clear that its best efforts to protect | |
> intimate details about passengers is far from foolproof, calling its | |
> cybersecurity measures “commercially reasonable.” In November, company | |
> executives were called out by Hong Kong lawmakers who accused the air- | |
> line of misleading the public about the seriousness of a massive data | |
> breach which may have compromised the personal information of as many | |
> as 9.4 million customers. | |
Cathay Pacific: Our Seatback Screens Are Definitely Recording You [Jeff | |
Edwards/Flyertalk] | |
Posted by Cory Doctorow | |
11:20 AM Fri Aug 2, 2019 | |
Content license: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0 | |
It's not as-if they fly anywhere which I want to go that isn't covered by | |
either Delta or a mainland airline. | |
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Comments have been left on this post: | |
a small dab of super glue on the camera lenses should take care if the | |
video. | |
Posted Sat Aug 17 01:14:13 UTC 2019 by 178.17.170.135 | |
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Probably, but I would recommend using a reversible method to lessen the | |
likelihood of being arrested. Stickers come to mind. BTW, many of the | |
competitors to CX/KA/UO, such as AA, DL and UA have covered up the | |
cameras on their entertainment system, as they never used them to begin | |
with. CX has had a hard time lately, and they really could show their | |
customers that they are NOT CREEPY by fixing this camera issue. | |
Posted Sat Aug 17 21:38:24 UTC 2019 by zcrayfish | |
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