TSA, Noem and Liquid Limit
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From shoe-free screening to facial recognition technology, here's how airport security checkpoints are being transformed in 2025.
Now that the much-hated "shoes off" policy has been officially ended, Bruce Schneier sees other parts of the TSA's "security theater" that serve little to no purpose.
9don MSNOpinion
The TSA ends its stupidest rule ever after 20 years of pointlessness: The Transportation Security Administration has started to phase out its rule requiring travelers to take off their shoes before going through security after,
The Department of Homeland Security announced a new TSA policy that allows passengers to keep their shoes on while passing through security screening, potentially signaling the upcoming end of other TSA security rules.
Soon, you’ll no longer have to remove your shoes when going through airport security checkpoints at many major airports across the country.
Passengers at Missouri airports no longer have to remove their shoes at security checkpoints. Transportation Security Administration Regional Spokesman Carter Langston says passengers the change should result in shorter wait times at security checkpoints.
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The Points Guy on MSNIt’s official: Travelers no longer have to remove shoes at TSA checkpointsThe Transportation Security Administration is rolling back its long-standing policy requiring passengers to remove shoes at checkpoints.