#2 This isn't new at all, several companies worked on this in the late 90's but the ultra-libs (they call themselves privacy advocates) make a stink. They acted like it was a clever way for perverts to look at womens tits, not screen for weapons, so it never got off the ground. I think sony even had a quick brush with this kind of trouble, but gave up on the tech right away as soon as someone complained. I'm sure the libs will try to axe it this time too, under the pretence of "invasion of privacy" or the ever popular "infringement of constitutional rights", which can be almost anything a lib doesnt like. |