A big lump of coal for Clear, whose sole purpose is to undermine a core government function.
Advertisementlast year she said that “We want Clear to become part of people’s daily habit, to go from 12 times a year using it—which is how people on average were using it in airports—to 12 times a day.” For now, however, a recentstates that “the company derives substantially all of its revenue from subscriptions to its consumer aviation service.
Airports empower Clear Secure’s employees to issue instructions to all flyers going through security—including those who never signed up for CLEAR. According to Robert Yingling, the director of corporate communications for the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority , “Because we have a contract with [Clear Secure], their ambassadors are authorized to take an active role in queue management.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
First Mover Americas: Grayscale Explores Options to Return Portion of GBTCGrayscale are exploring options to return a portion of its GBTC and Sam Bankman-Fried no longer will contest extradition to the U.S. LedesmaLyllah reports.
Read more »
‘Frank Bowling’s Americas’ Review: Ambivalent AbstractionThe oeuvre of the black British painter, now the subject of a retrospective at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, presents a contest between the abstract and the figurative.
Read more »
Permit issued for construction of $68 million third phase of Huntsville’s CityCentreConstruction is progressing on the third phase of CityCentre, a mixed-use development adjacent to Big Spring Park near the Von Braun Center in downtown Huntsville.
Read more »
Guns confiscated in U.S. airports reach record number so far in 2022The Transportation Security Administration says it’s anticipating that by the end of the year they’ll have nabbed 6,600 weapons. The agency says that’s nearly a 10% increase over last year.
Read more »
TSA trying out facial recognition system at several new airportsThere's a good chance that many of us traveling for the holidays through some of the nation's busiest airports will have our faces scanned.
Read more »