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Will fingerprinting replace need for a passport?

Scandinavian airline SAS has introduced finger-print check-in on a domestic flight from Stockholm to Gotenburg in Sweden. Its purpose at the moment is to make sure that the person who checks-in luggage is the same as the person boarding the flight, a sure advantage for airport /on-flight security.

On a domestic level, this makes sense as check-in procedures are relatively lax when traveling within the country, and even within the EU for that matter; but they plan to eventually make it an international check-in system.

Fingerprinting at airports is not new. The US introduced it a while ago as an added security check for visitors to the country; the UK has a similar system, but not restricted to visitors; and Dubai has had a retina scan system for a while now. This makes it impossible for people to travel with fraudulent documents.

Dubai went beyond finger-printing for security purposes when they introduced the eGate card -- a check-in option for Dubai-based frequent travelers who don't want to stand in line to get their passport stamped. If you have this card, you swipe it to enter/exit the airport, match your finger-print on a screen and you are through.

So the question is: will we eventually be able to travel without any printed form of identification? If you are finger-printing and retina-scanning anyway, other than to have a stamp, what do we need passports for?

Filed under: Asia, Europe, North America, United Arab, United Kingdom, United States, Airlines, Airports, News

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