Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

KLM to test face-scanning at Dutch airport

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KLM will use face-scanning technology at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport in a test of ways to speed up the boarding process and improve security.

The three-month trial requires passengers to register in advance and then scan boarding passes, passports and faces at a special kiosk, the airport said in an emailed statement. The test will take place at a selected gate at KLM’s hub.

Airports and airlines worldwide are exploring the use of new technologi­es to speed passengers through terminals more quickly and deal with the risks associated with internatio­nal travel.

In Japan, the government early last year invested to install facial-recognitio­n systems at airports nationwide to boost security.

In the U.S., biometric screening company Clear is expanding to 22 major U.S. airports with lanes that use fingerprin­ts or iris scans to check members’ identities. The service eliminates the need for boarding passes at the security checkpoint­s and identity checks and lets members head straight to Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion screening. New York-based Clear charges $179 a year, with new enrollees receiving a one-month trial for free.

The company opened lanes last month at New York’s John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport and is adding New York’s LaGuardia, Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson and Los Angeles Internatio­nal, among others. Delta Air Lines Inc. owns a 5 percent stake in Clear.

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