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Abrupt closure of airport fast-lane program sparks concern over customer data

Financial woes push Verified Identity Pass to cease Clear program

June 23, 2009 08:34 PM ET

Computerworld - A company that collected detailed personal information including biometric data on 260,000 individuals as part of a registered air traveler program it operated has abruptly gone out of business, leaving many customers wondering about the safety and privacy of their personal data.

Verified Identity Pass Inc. (VIP) announced on Sunday that it was ceasing its Clear service, which was designed to help air travelers get through airport security checks faster. The service had been available at 21 major airports, including New York's JFK and La Guardia, Boston's Logan and Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson airports

The company signed up more than 260,000 travelers since its 2005 inception and processed more than 2.5 million fliers through its Clear lanes.

In a brief note posted on its Web site, VIP said that it had been unable to "negotiate a settlement" with its main creditor and therefore had to shut down. In an update this morning, the company, which is one of seven approved by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) to operate a registered traveler program, assured its 260,000 customers that their personal data was and is being protected in compliance with TSA's privacy and security standards.

The statement said VIP would "take appropriate steps" to delete the information collected for the Clear service. But it offered no details on what those steps were or when they would be taken.

The statement also added that because of the company's current financial situation, no refunds would be available to customers who had signed up for the $199 per year service.

The Clear program was designed to help frequent fliers get through airport security lines quicker by vetting their identities in advance. To sign up, customers had to submit to background checks and provide identifying information including Social Security and credit card numbers, current home address, date and place of birth, phone numbers and driver's license numbers, as well as having their fingerprints taken, iris images scanned, and digital images of their faces taken.

According to the Clear program's privacy notice, the company takes extensive measures to protect the data, including encryption of all personal information while it is in transit or storage. But VIP's abrupt discontinuance of Clear just days after it had been promoting the service as an ideal father's day gift and trying to get longer-term subscriptions for it, appears to have sparked considerable concern among customers.

Peggy Duncan, a personal productivity consultant and professional speaker based in Atlanta, said she learned about the company's demise via a brief e-mail sent to her in the early hours on Monday morning. Despite having only positive experiences with the service so far, she said today she is very worried about her personally identifiable data held by Clear.



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