Skip to main content
×
Blacklisted Listed News Logo
Menu - Navigation
Menu - Navigation

Cited Sources

2nd Smartest Guy in the World
2nd Amendment Shirts
10th Amendment Center
Aaron Mate
Activist Post
AIER
Aletho News
Ammo.com
AmmoLand
Alliance for Natural Health, The
Alt-Market
American Free Press
Antiwar
Armstrong Economics
Art of Liberty
AUTOMATIC EARTH, The
Ben Bartee
Benny Wills
Big League Politics
Black Vault, The
BOMBTHROWER
Brandon Turbeville
Breaking Defense
Breitbart
Brownstone Institute
Burning Platform, The
Business Insider
Business Week
Caitlin Johnstone
Campus Reform
CAPITALIST EXPLOITS
Charles Hugh Smith
Children's Health Defense
CHRISTOPHE BARRAUD
Chris Wick
CIAgate
Citizen Free Press
Citizens for Legit Gov.
CNN Money
Collective Evolution
Common Dreams
Conscious Resistance Network
Corbett Report
Counter Signal, The
Cryptogon
Cryptome
Daily Bell, The
Daily Reckoning, The
Daily Veracity
DANERIC'S ELLIOTT WAVES
Dark Journalist
David Haggith
Defense Industry Daily
Defense Link
Defense One
Dennis Broe
DOLLAR COLLAPSE
DR. HOUSING BUBBLE
Dr. Robert Malone
Drs. Wolfson
Drudge Report
Economic Collapse, The
ECONOMIC POPULIST, The
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Ellen Brown
Emerald Robinson
Expose, The
F. William Engdahl
FAIR
Farm Wars
Faux Capitalist
FINANCIAL REVOLUTIONIST
Forbes
Foreign Policy Journal
FOREXLIVE
Foundation For Economic Freedom
Free Thought Project, The
From Behind Enemy Lines
From The Trenches
FUNDIST
Future of Freedom Foundation
Futurism
GAINS PAINS & CAPITAL
GEFIRA
Geopolitical Monitor
Glenn Greenwald
Global Research
Global Security
GM RESEARCH
GOLD CORE
Grayzone, The
Great Game India
Guadalajara Geopolitics
Helen Caldicott
Homeland Sec. Newswire
Human Events
I bank Coin
IEEE
IMPLODE-EXPLODE
Information Clearing House
Information Liberation
Infowars
Insider Paper
Intel News
Intercept, The
Jane's
Jay's Analysis
Jeff Rense
John Adams
John Pilger
John W. Whitehead
Jonathan Cook
Jon Rappoport
Jordan Schachtel
Just The News
Kevin Barret
Kitco
Last American Vagabond, The
Lew Rockwell
Le·gal In·sur·rec·tion
Libertarian Institute, The
Libertas Bella
LIBERTY BLITZKRIEG
LIBERTY Forcast
Liberty Unyielding
Market Oracle
Market Watch
Maryanne Demasi
Matt Taibbi
Medical Express
Media Monarchy
Mercola
Michael Snyder
Michael Tracey
Middle East Monitor
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
Military Info Tech
Mind Unleashed, The
Mint Press
MISES INSTITUTE
Mises Wire
MISH TALK
Money News
Moon of Alabama
Motherboard
My Budget 360
Naked Capitalism
Natural News
New American, The
New Eastern Outlook
News Deck
New World Next Week
Nicholas Creed
OF TWO MINDS
Off-Guardian
Oil Price
OPEN THE BOOKS
Organic Prepper, The
PANDEMIC: WAR ROOM
PETER SCHIFF
Phantom Report
Pierre Kory
Political Vigilante
Public Intelligence
Rair
Reclaim The Net
Revolver
Richard Dolan
Right Turn News
Rokfin
RTT News
Rutherford Institute
SAFEHAVEN
SAKER, The
Shadow Stats
SGT Report
Shadowproof
Slay News
Slog, The
SLOPE OF HOPE
Solari
South Front
Sovereign Man
Spacewar
spiked
SPOTGAMMA
Steve Kirsch
Steve Quayle
Strange Sounds
Strike The Root
Summit News
Survival Podcast, The
Tech Dirt
Technocracy News
Techno Fog
Terry Wahls, M.D.
TF METALS REPORT
THEMIS TRADING
Tom Renz
True Activist
unlimited hangout
UNREDACTED
Unreported Truths
Unz Review, The
VALUE WALK
Vigilant Citizen
Voltaire
Waking Times
Wall Street Journal
Wallstreet on Parade
Wayne Madsen
What Really Happened
Whitney Webb
winter oak
Wolf Street
Zero Hedge

Connecting the DHS to the airline industry

Published: April 12, 2021 | Print Friendly and PDF
  Gab
Share

Request For Information (RFI) posted on a website for Federal government contractors gives a glimpse into the degree to which the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has embedded itself into the information technology infrastructure of the airline industry.

The RFI for Services to Electronically Transmit Airline Data was posted April 5, 2021, by US Customs and Border Protection (CBP). Responses from potential vendors are due by April 19, 2021.

CBP says it is “conducting market research to gain a greater understanding of the full range of available options for services for obtaining names and related information of passengers who are arriving and departing the U.S. on commercial airlines.” Although the RFI was put out by CBP, which surveils and controls international air travel and cargo transport to and from the US, it appears to contemplate integration with the parallel systems used by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) for data-driven surveillance and control of domestic US air travel as well.

According to the RFI:

CBP is evaluating transmission options for air carriers to use in compliance with these requirements.

  • The vendor must have established connectivity with the airline community.
  • The vendor must be able to test and certify with the air carriers, the vendor, CBP and TSA as required.

For those unfamiliar with the “parallel universe” of airline IT and data communications networks, this RFI might best be conceptualized by analogy to the specifications for the equipment — revealed by whistleblower Mark Klein — that was installed in the facilities of AT&T and other telecommunications companies to provide real-time copies of message data to the National Security Agency (NSA).

While the NSA receives metadata about the movements of our messages in the form of telephone calls, email messages, Web browsing, and other Internet traffic, CBP receives metadata about the movements of our physical bodies, whenever we travel by air, in the form of, according to the RFI,  “Passenger Name Records (PNR), air cargo manifests, advance passenger information (API), passenger manifests, and other airline-related data.”

The TSA receives a similar but somewhat different dataset of all domestic airline flights in the form of Secure Flight Passenger Data (SFPD).

The RFI requests information from vendors that already have  “an available global private network primarily used by the aviation industry to enable the aviation industry to send/receive API, PNR, and other information to CBP and other entities.”

As the NSA did with telecommunications companies, CBP embeds itself in vendors’ data centers and message switching hubs:

The contractor shall provide the following to permit the electronic transmission of airline data to CBP’s computer network and host systems:

Provide Ethernet Internet Protocol (IP) connections to the contractor’s private global network. CBP routers are located on vendor’s premises. Contractor provides physical space at their datacenter(s) to include ¼ communications rack to house DHS/CBP co-located equipment that connects to the contractor’s private global network.

Unlike the “black boxes” installed in AT&T and other telecommunications and Internet switching centers to send mirror copies of messages to the NSA, the CBP/DHS connection to the global airline reservation cloud is bidirectional. The role of the DHS is not limited to passive surveillance, which would require only a unidirectional data feed.  DHS exercises positive permission-based prior restraint and control of the issuance of each boarding pass, which requires reliable real-time transmission of Boarding Pass Printing Result (BPRR) permission messages from DHS to airline check-in counters and Web check-in systems worldwide.

Currently, each airline has the option of connecting directly to CBP for bi-directional  transmission of PNR and API data and receipt of BPPR messages through a virtual private network using CBP-specified protocols and vendors, or connecting to DHS through one of two vendors approved by CBP to act as intermediaries: ARINC or SITA.

It’s unclear what other companies, aside from the major Computerized Reservation Systems, a/k/a Global Distribution Systems (Sabre, Amadeus, and Travelport) might be in a position to provide the services currently provided to the DHS by ARINC and SITA.

Both ARINC and SITA were formed by consortia of airlines as joint ventures to share the cost of building and operating global real-time data communications networks. At the time, neither the the telegraph network nor any other third-party service was sufficiently real-time or reliable or had sufficient global coverage to meet airline operational needs. So, as with other pioneering aspects of airline IT, airlines built their own global real-time data network before any other industry or any general-purpose commercial provider had one.

ARINC, founded in 1929 as Aeronautical Radio, Inc., is now part of the the Collins Aerospace division of Rockwell Collins. SITA, founded in 1949 as  the Société Internationale de Télécommunications Aéronautiques, remains primarily airline-owned. Both provide a range of licensed software and software-as-a-service to airlines that prefer to outsource IT functions ranging from data communications to flight crew scheduling. Smaller airlines that can’t afford to develop their own IT systems tend to be especially reliant on SITA, but essentially all airlines make use of some services provided by ARINC and/or SITA.

One of those services to which the DHS demands access is IATA “Type B” messaging. Type B messaging (often referred to colloquially in the airline industry as “SITA messaging” even when provided by ARINC) is offered by both ARINC and SITA, but using the same structured addresses and with an AIRINC-SITA gateway. Customers of either company can send and receive Type B messages without needing to know if they are served by AIRINC or SITA.

If you know what to look for, you can often spot 7-letter Type B addresses on business cards and letterhead and in email signature lines of workers in  the airline industry. A Type B address consists of a 3-letter IATA airport or city code, a 2-letter designator for a functional component, and the 2-letter IATA code of the airline. “LAXSSTG”, for example, would be the Los Angeles (LAX) sales office (SS) of Thai Airways International (TG).

Type B messages are in plain text and mostly human-readable. But like air traffic control communications, they are composed in a highly structured jargon, and many Type B messages are machine-generated and machine-processed, while remaining backward-compatible with manual processing and delivery methods ranging from email to hand delivery in hardcopy by messenger. Type B messaging is one of the methods specified by IATA for transmitting mirror copies of PNRs from airlines to governments.

According to the RFI posted by CBP:

Contractor shall support interactive messaging when 7-letter IATA Addressing is used by the Airlines. Contractor shall mitigate the protocol mitigation in order to deliver messages sent to CBP systems, as well as messages originating at CBP and destined for delivery to the Airlines.

[Contractor shall] Provide unlimited Type B messaging.

Type B messaging is guaranteed, store-and- forward message delivery. Type B messages are an IATA standard. Type B messaging is widely used by airlines, and computer reservation systems and used by CBP to receive Advance Passenger Information, based on the International Air Transport Association (IATA)/Airlines for America (A4A) endorsed standard. It is a Messaging service that allows centrally controlled communications with every participant in the extensive Type B community and a Value added service that provides security, traceability, integrity, and sender and receiver identification on top of connectivity through one connection.

It’s unclear exactly what use the DHS may be making, or plan to make, of Type B messaging, aside from receipt of PNR, API, and SFPD and sending of BPPR data. We would welcome any tips from readers as to DHS use or planned use of Type B messaging and/or the Type B addresses used by DHS or its components including CBP and the TSA.

We’ll be making a Freedom Of Information Act (FOIA) request for all of the responses to this RFI as soon as the solicitation deadline has passed.

TOP TRENDING ARTICLES


PLEASE DISABLE AD BLOCKER TO VIEW DISQUS COMMENTS

Ad Blocking software disables some of the functionality of our website, including our comments section for some browsers.


Trending Now



BlackListed News 2006-2023
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service