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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">iStockOn Tuesday morning, a frustrated passenger on Delta Air Lines Flight
1452 from Seattle Tacoma International Airport to New York's JFK International
Airport took luggage fee resentment to a new level. The traveler apparently
simply gave up his bags.Rather than face $1,400 in overweight baggage fees,
the flier opted to leave his belongings behind at the Delta check-in
kiosk in Seattle, reports NBC News. As a result, the Delta lobby
was closed down for more than two hours while security inspected the
unattended luggage.Eventually Seattles airport security determined the discarded
bags were not a threat and were able to identify their owner
and the owner's flight.Law enforcement officials with the Port Authority
of New York/New Jersey met the flight and interviewed the passenger upon
arrival at JFK, TSA spokesperson Ross Feinstein told NBC News.Upon interviewing
the traveler, officials determined there was no criminal intent by the passenger.While
this is an extreme case, Delta admits that they find unattended bags
on a regular basis, according to Yahoo Finance.This does not come as
a surprise after examining the airlines rates for checking luggage. Delta
currently charges $25 for the first checked bag, $35 for the second
checked bag on domestic flights. A checked bag costs $125 and bags
4-10 cost $200 each.Even worse, the airline charges fees on top of
fees.According to Delta's website, If an extra piece of baggage exceeds
the weight
Washington Post was an order to Verizon, says that access to
phone "metadata" is restricted to "authorized personnel who have received
appropriate and adequate training."At the same time, a footnote says the
court understands that "technical personnel responsible for NSA's underlying
corporate infrastructure and the transmission" of the data "will not receive
special training."The order goes on to describe how a "store" of information
is created, and how trained personnel can query the data using certain
criteria and search for "valid foreign intelligence purposes."That information,
the order says, can be shared among properly trained NSA analysts. And
from there, top officials including the NSA director can authorize certain
information be shared outside of the NSA with other "Executive Branch personnel,"
provided it is "related to counterterrorism" and sharing it is necessary
to understanding that information. This would include federal security agencies
like the FBI.This information, according to the court order, includes "U.S.
person identifying information" -- and can be stored for five years.The
document lays out a series of steps that are supposed to be
taken to ensure that access to the database remains limited.But a separate
document released Wednesday by the DNI reported that "there have been a
number of technical compliance problems and human implementation errors"
in programs that collect both bulk phone and email records.No
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