The average TSA worker earns $12-$17/hour. In Florida, where this guy was from, he was probably closer to the $12 end of the scale. This agent is probably in his early 20s and is only making slightly more than someone working at a fast food restaurant. That is about as “most people” as you can get. And given that most Americans don’t understand confusing status of The District of Columbia, I stand by my assertion that it is completely reasonable for someone not to trust a license from some place that is not an state.
This whole situation reminds me of countless experiences I’ve had working with entry level IT/security people. Entry level people are generally very passionate about their jobs, probably like this TSA guy is, but they are still filling in knowledge gaps, so it is reasonable to expect silly mistakes. For instance, how many of us have been told that that a client connecting to a server has an IP address of 169.254.1.2 but they are *certain* that the issue is with the server? It would be easy to criticize an over zealous newbie but that doesn’t help anyone in the long run. And that is why I feel that this reporter is making a mountain out of a molehill. Does he reasonably believe that no one at the TSA knows that the District of Columbia issues their own licenses? If not, then shouldn’t the story should be “1 TSA employee out of 50,000 doesn’t know that District of Columbia issues their own licenses.” —bill On Jul 18, 2014, at 11:25 AM, Blanchard, Michael (InfoSec) <michael.blanch...@emc.com> wrote: > Sorry, this guy is supposedly a trained professional.... he's not "most > people" he should have known that DC issues their own license... _______________________________________________ Fun and Misc security discussion for OT posts. https://linuxbox.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/funsec Note: funsec is a public and open mailing list.