Comments on: Arizona and Bad Bentheim /blog/2012/07/arizona-and-bad-bentheim/ But I fear more for Muninn... Thu, 16 May 2013 14:30:52 +0000 hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.2 By: Kstylick /blog/2012/07/arizona-and-bad-bentheim/comment-page-1/#comment-278383 Tue, 04 Dec 2012 23:26:30 +0000 http://muninn.net/blog/?p=1017#comment-278383 I do understand that this truly happens in a lot of nations all over the world. But it’s simply hard to accept. If I’m in your position I would really be scared even if I did nothing wrong. I guess I’d be chilling when I’m subjected to that inquisition. Hopefully they could think of a better approach.

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By: Kerim Friedman /blog/2012/07/arizona-and-bad-bentheim/comment-page-1/#comment-271554 Sun, 22 Jul 2012 23:40:48 +0000 http://muninn.net/blog/?p=1017#comment-271554 “Ethics aside, institutionalized profiling fails because real attackers are so rare: Active failures will be much more common than passive failures. The great majority of people who fit the profile will be innocent. At the same time, some real attackers are going to deliberately try to sneak past the profile.”

http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2005/07/profiling.html

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By: Kerim Friedman /blog/2012/07/arizona-and-bad-bentheim/comment-page-1/#comment-271553 Sun, 22 Jul 2012 23:38:54 +0000 http://muninn.net/blog/?p=1017#comment-271553 What I don’t understand is that, from everything I’ve read, such profiling is not effective from a border patrol/security perspective – yet it persists. Are they just not well trained? Or do they persist in profiling despite their training?

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