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FTE Global 2023 exhibitor & sponsor preview – innovative solutions to help airports and airlines enhance end-to-end customer experiences at the “CES of Aviation”

The following article was published by Future Travel Experience
Renowned as the “CES of Aviation”, the exhibition at FTE Global – taking place in…

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The following article was published by Future Travel Experience

Renowned as the “CES of Aviation”, the exhibition at FTE Global – taking place in Los Angeles on 19-21 September 2023 – will be our biggest and best-ever, with over 100 exhibitors and sponsors confirmed.

Renowned as the “CES of Aviation”, the exhibition at FTE Global – taking place in Los Angeles in less than two weeks (19-21 September) – will be our biggest and best-ever, with over 100 exhibitors and sponsors confirmed. The exhibition will be packed with the most innovative solutions, products and services to enhance end-to-end customer experiences, business performance and sustainability, ranging from technology giants to the most innovative startups. The popular ‘Innovation & Tech Briefings’ on the exhibition floor return, with attendees having the opportunity to join guided tours and meet exhibitors with relevant products, services and concepts across six areas: Baggage; Self-Service Technology; Customer & Employee Empowerment; Security, Digital Identity & Biometrics; Robotics & Autonomous Vehicles; and Startup Showcase. Meanwhile, the brand-new FTE Launch Pad will unveil game-changing new technologies. Here, we highlight the solutions you can expect to see on the exhibition floor.

NEC

NEC Corporation of America is a leading provider of innovative IT, network, communications and biometric solutions for service carriers, Fortune 1000 and SMB businesses across multiple vertical industries, including Aviation, Healthcare, Government, Education and Hospitality. NEC Corporation of America delivers one of the industry’s broadest portfolios of technology solutions and professional services, including biometric security, consent-based digital IDs, unified communications, wireless, voice and data, managed services, server and storage infrastructure, optical network systems, and microwave radio communications.

Stop by the NEC booth (D2) to see an exclusive demonstration of PARALLEL REALITY technology from Misapplied Sciences. This innovative technology provides personalised airport experiences for each of a hundred people simultaneously sharing the same digital display. Currently, installed in the Detroit McNamara Terminal it offers immersive and interactive capabilities that are the next evolution of the Parallel Reality installations. Stop by to learn more!

Airport Dimensions

Airport Dimensions are the global leaders in airport lounges and traveller experiences. The company continuously seeks ways to open new dimensions in customer engagement – using a mix of enriching physical experiences and innovative digital services. From comfortable lounges to restful sleep pods, and convenient food ordering to contactless collection of duty free, Airport Dimensions helps improve the traveller experience while critically helping airports maximise non-aeronautical revenue opportunities, retain airlines, and become more competitive.

Already market leaders in the United States and United Kingdom, Airport Dimensions’ global network is expanding rapidly. Its locations are at the world’s leading airports across the United States, South America, Middle East, Asia Pacific and the United Kingdom, where the Club Aspire lounge at Heathrow Terminal 3 was most recently recognised in the World Travel Awards as ‘Europe’s Leading Airport Lounge’ and ‘World’s Leading Airport Lounge 2022’.

Using the latest technologies, Airport Dimensions has invested in driving revenue growth for airports and increasing traveller satisfaction with the launch of its first digital service Connecta – a one-stop e-commerce and passenger loyalty platform.

Register for FTE Global 2023 >>

Collins Aerospace

Collins Aerospace is ‘Redefining Air Travel’ and charting the path to a healthier, easier, and more connected travel experience – now and into the future. Its Connected Aviation Solutions business is uniquely positioned to provide revolutionary digital solutions to its airline and airport customers, enabling them to bring forth their vision of a fully connected digital aviation ecosystem. Aviation Connects the World. Collins Connects Aviation.

IDEMIA

IDEMIA I&S is a leader in identity security and authentication services to governments and private companies, operating in North America. Its mission is to help people access what matters most more quickly, more safely, and more securely, in both the physical and the digital worlds. The company’s best-in-class technology delivers ‘Identity with Integrity’ and helps authenticate and secure physical and digital transactions.

IDEMIA is hosting a pop-up TSA PreCheck enrolment event at this year’s FTE Global, with no appointment needed. Look out for IDEMIA’s TSA PreCheck enrolment cart going up and down the aisles of the exhibition on 19-20 September.

3 easy steps to TSA PreCheck:

  • Apply online: Submit an online application before you come to FTE Global to make your enrolment super-fast.
  • Enrol at FTE Global: Find IDEMIA’s easy-to-spot TSA PreCheck enrolment cart at the FTE Global exhibition and complete the less than 10-minute enrolment, which includes capturing your fingerprints and photo for the TSA background check. Be sure to bring documentation proving your identity and citizenship
  • Get your Known Traveler Number (KTN): Most travellers get their KTN in three to five days.

Learn more about IDEMIA in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Security, Digital Identity & Biometrics, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 10:15-11:00 on 20 September 2023. IDEMIA’s MFACE Pro offers a secure, reliable, and accurate solution for capturing facial biometrics. The CAT2 is an effective tool for airport security, providing enhanced fraudulent ID detection capabilities while confirming the identity and flight information of travellers, and is currently being utilised at approximately 120 airport locations in the U.S.

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BagID

3 billion paper bag tags are printed each year and in 2022, 26 million items of luggage were lost, often because the luggage tag has been worn out or attached incorrectly. BagID was founded to solve this problem and make air travel with checked luggage more comfortable, smart and sustainable. With BagID 2, an electronic bag tag, you can check in your luggage at home and transfer the tag to your BagID 2. You can skip the check-in kiosk at the airport and travel paperless. With tracking via Apple Find My or Samsung SmartThings Find you have full control of your luggage throughout the journey.

Learn more about BagID in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Baggage, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 13:00-13:45 on 19 September 2023. It will present the BagID 2 – an electronic bag tag with tracking and smart notifications. With BagID 2 it is super easy to keep track of your belongings. You can travel with the security that you can find your luggage anywhere on your journey.

BagsID

Computer-vision software that creates a digital layer over existing airport infrastructure. Baggage intelligence for airports and airlines, made available through APIs. For the airlines and airports of tomorrow, baggage intelligence is a necessity. The BagsID global team works with leading airlines and airports worldwide, comparing thousands of baggage images hourly, and processing collected data.

BagsID explains that attending FTE Global “provides a platform to gain insights into emerging trends and cutting-edge technologies that will shape the future of travel. Networking opportunities allow for connections with industry leaders, fostering collaborations and partnerships to stay ahead in a rapidly-evolving landscape. This expo also enables exposure to groundbreaking innovations, fostering inspiration to enhance customer experiences, operational efficiency, and sustainability. Interactive demonstrations and presentations offer a first-hand understanding of disruptive technologies like AI, biometrics, and sustainable aviation solutions, aiding in informed decision-making”.

BagsID is a Strategic Partner of the FTE Baggage Innovation Working Group.

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Boingo Wireless

Boingo Wireless, Inc. simplifies complex wireless challenges to connect people, business and things. Boingo designs, builds and manages converged, neutral host 5G and Wi-Fi networks at major airports around the world, including JFK, LAX, ORD, London Heathrow and Dubai International. Boingo’s vast footprint of distributed antenna systems (DAS), Wi-Fi, small cells and macro towers securely powers innovation and connectivity to improve the passenger experience and streamline operations.

At FTE Global, Boingo will showcase its suite of award-winning connectivity solutions for airports, including DAS, private 5G, small cells, Wi-Fi and IoT networks. Stop by to chat about real-world 5G use cases deployed at Boingo partner airports. Airport executives and stakeholders will gain a better understanding of how these technologies improve the entire passenger experience, from parking and arrival to boarding to baggage claim and beyond. Attendees can also learn how wireless connectivity solutions are driving digital transformation strategies to optimise airport operations and create smart, interconnected airports.

eSIM Go

eSIM Go is committed to revolutionising digital connectivity through its comprehensive eSIM solutions tailored to airlines, airports and travel operators, resellers, enterprises start-ups and everything in-between. With its affiliate opportunities, you can plug-in your eSIM offering to your customer touchpoints quickly and seamlessly, while meeting the increased data demands of your travellers to over 160 countries. Benefit from eSIM Go’s world-class connectivity, which delivers a host of benefits including 5G, multi-network coverage, auto-APN and fully resilient architecture managed by its experienced team of developers, telecom experts, and support.

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HRS Crew & Passenger Solutions

HRS is reinventing the way businesses and governments work, stay and pay in today’s dynamic global marketplace. HRS’ advanced platform technology is extending its reach beyond hospitality to meetings, office space management, payment efficiency and crisis recovery. Beyond cost savings in the global post-pandemic economy, HRS clients gain from an unrivalled focus on essential aspects including safety, security and satisfaction. HRS is also recognised for its award-winning Green Stay Initiative, technology that helps corporate hotel programmes achieve their NetZero targets, and its groundbreaking Crew & Passengers Solution, which leverages automation to elevate experiences for air and rail operations. Founded in 1972, HRS works with 40% of the global Fortune 500, as well as the world’s leading hotel chains, regional hospitality groups and payment providers.

Learn more about HRS Crew & Passenger Solutions in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Customer & Employee Empowerment, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 16:00-16:30 on 19 September 2023. HRS is setting a new standard for crew and passenger experiences, delivered through one dedicated platform. Thanks to the power of one, its procure2book platform delivers time-savings and efficiency gains for all parties – for operations managers, for stranded passengers, and for crew – while enabling full data transparency and data-driven decisions.

Just Walk Out technology by Amazon

Just Walk Out technology empowers retailers to delight customers while driving operational efficiencies. With a combination of computer vision, sensor fusion, and deep learning, retailers can deliver effortless, convenient, checkout-free shopping.

Amazon One is a fast, convenient, contactless identity service that uses your palm – just hover to enter, identify, and pay.

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Populous

Populous is a global design firm with colleagues spanning four continents. Working with communities of all sizes and using a range of disciplines, it creates experiences that amplify the joy felt in shared human moments.

Veovo

Veovo powers up airport performance and shapes brilliant travel experiences for over 120 airports worldwide, including Amsterdam Schiphol, New York’s JFK, Orlando International, and Sydney.

Dive into the world of cutting-edge airports that harness the power of AI to forecast anything, anywhere to reduce wait times and revolutionise passenger services. Experience the future of gate management as Machine Learning takes the spotlight, crafting stronger aircraft parking plans and driving smarter tactical choices. Explore the art of optimising aeronautical income and driving growth and sustainability with flexible charging and incentives for cleaner aircraft.

The Veovo Intelligent Airport Platform is a cloud-based solution offering AODB, Resource Management, FIDS, Revenue Management, Queue and Flow Management, Passenger Forecasting and Capacity Optimisation. Veovo is headquartered in London, UK, with its customers supported by US, New Zealand, Poland, and Denmark teams.

Veovo is excited to unveil its cutting-edge LiDAR technology at FTE Global, promising to revolutionise how airports handle their operations. LiDAR, which stands for Light Detection and Ranging, is a very accurate mapping system that can pinpoint objects with incredible precision. This technology is transforming how airports understand passenger movement, manage resources, and tackle queues. Veovo’s new LiDAR technology seamlessly integrates with its cloud-based analytics platform and other movement sensors, creating a dynamic ecosystem. With this unique hybrid approach and powered by Machine Learning, the Veovo platform delivers real-time and historical insights into queues and people movement throughout the airport and forecasts people and baggage presentation profiles at every checkpoint.

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Abomis Innovations

Abomis Innovations is an IT company specialising in airport software for airlines and ground handling companies. Over the years, it has created a reliable infrastructure that solves problems in lack of resources in passenger and baggage management. This foundation continues to grow and puts software solutions at the fingertips of ground staff, administration, and crew for increased communication, increased collaboration, and efficiency for every division of your team. This includes software as a solution for departure control, weight and balance, baggage reconciliation, customer reservation system, cost management, crew records, and much more. With a keen eye for detail, the Abomis Innovations team designs, creates and develops simpler solutions for airlines around the world, using existing hardware and mobile devices to reduce training time and increase efficiency. Abomis Innovations works in the future, constantly striving to create things that will be ready when the technology becomes available. It values customer feedback and offers customisations for all customers, providing easy-to-use, need-specific software.

ADB SAFEGATE

ADB SAFEGATE provides integrated solutions to airports, airlines, and ANSPs. As a technology leader, it aims to raise airport efficiency, safety, and environmental sustainability while reducing operational costs. The company tackles operational bottlenecks, enabling clients to address current challenges while preparing for the future.

ADB SAFEGATE’s innovative Airside 4.0 solutions are designed to turn airports into smart airports, with the ultimate goal of enhancing the passenger experience. Solutions include airfield lighting, power and control systems, airport and tower software, docking automation, apron management, and aftermarket services. Additionally, the company is committed to providing customers with products that help minimise the ecological footprint of the air transport industry.

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AeroCloud Systems

AeroCloud Systems is a cloud-based software provider whose mission is to become the largest supplier of operation automation software for the small to medium-sized airport market globally. Through the use of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning, it offers a modular intelligent airport management platform built on leading-edge technology, accessible from anywhere and by an unlimited number of users, allowing airports to save costs and time by automating tasks that have long been done manually in airport operations.

Air’mazing DutyFreak

Create an amazing passenger experience to increase revenue, satisfaction and expand your product range. Enable any traveller to discover and explore all products and specials at every store to find their “ONE+ favourite item” at each airport to pre-order it in the right colour, size or quantity, and pre-pay to easily collect it at the departure airport on the way to the gate.

DutyFreak helps airports, stores and airlines to get more buying travellers through the digital reach of the power at DutyFreak App. Increase reach to all types – departure, transit and arrival travellers.

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Airline Choice

Airline Choice is a leading provider of cutting-edge technology solutions to airlines, airports, and ground handlers around the world. Its mission is to continue to push boundaries that make lasting impressions across the industry. Forward-thinking passenger handling and airport operations are just the start. Make your passenger’s journey remarkable with the revolutionised Departure Control System by maximising sales, while stress-free check-in and boarding, automation, self-service and worry-free compliance await on the Airline Choice Platform.

Airline Choice’s departure control platform and innovative hardware solutions deliver class-leading passenger handling, self-service and compliance solutions that streamline airport operations across the world.

Airside

Airside is pleased to join FTE Global 2023 to demonstrate how the Airside Digital Identity App makes the future of travel a reality today by verifying and sharing digital identity attributes to open a new world of opportunities and experiences.

From seamless travel at bag drop, the security checkpoint, and lounge entrance to remote authentication, and more, Airside provides trust and efficiency in the use of digital identity.

With Airside, travellers are empowered to control their personal information with transparent consent protocols while travel providers can enhance their services, decrease costs, and reduce the burdens of compliance.

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Airware

Airware is leading the mobile transformation in aviation, revolutionising the way airports and airlines process passengers, with a smartphone-first approach. It believes in delivering a simple and cost-effective process which delivers a seamless passenger experience. With over 30 years of experience developing and implementing disruptive self-service solutions for airports and airlines, the company’s founders are taking a fresh perspective to passenger processing, leveraging the passenger’s smartphones. Replacing multiple airline applications on CUTE, CUSS and SBD with a single airline mobile application enables quick and simple implementation, with extended capabilities for additional revenue.

Airware has been developed to replace legacy passenger processing technologies with two smartphone apps, one for the passenger and one for the agent, providing a rich set of functionalities for both. Visit the Airware stand for a demonstration of its solution, so you can experience self-service bag drop using a mobile phone.

Analogic

Analogic Corporation, headquartered in Peabody, MA, USA is a global leader in design, development, and manufacturing of advanced and cost-effective imaging and detection for security, healthcare, and other high-end industrial markets. Analogic has been an innovation leader in the field of Computed Tomography imaging for over 40 years, with over 2,000 CT systems and gantries deployed at airports worldwide through its Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) security partners. Analogic’s latest innovation is its ConneCT Computed Tomography (CT) checkpoint security screening system, which has been qualified by the U.S. TSA for deployment at U.S. airports in base, mid-size, and full-size configurations.

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Aurrigo

Aurrigo is a leading international provider of transport technology solutions. It designs, engineers, manufactures and supplies autonomous vehicles, particularly focusing on aviation. Aurrigo has developed six types of autonomous vehicle to date, from baggage/cargo vehicles to public transit, which can be utilised to reduce costs, resolve operational issues and tackle labour shortages, whilst also improving sustainability.

Aurrigo’s Auto-DollyTug offers customers an all-electric tractor that is ready for autonomous operations when the customer is. It features an industry first onboard payload capacity of 1.7 tonnes and tows up to 3 standard dollies for 6.8 tonnes total payload.

Auto-SIM – create a 3D digital twin to visualise and optimise today’s airside operations. Identify improvements by altering CONOPS and explore how to improve efficiency, safety, and profits.

Learn more about Aurrigo in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Robotics & Autonomous Vehicles, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 12:30-13:15 on 20 September 2023.

Baggage Solutions

Baggage Solutions develops software to transform baggage repatriation for passengers, airlines, ground handlers and delivery companies. With over 20 years’ experience in the airline baggage industry, the Baggage Solutions team understands the real-world complexity of baggage repatriation, and what it takes to turn it around. Since 2009, it has built a reputation for excellence in its products, implementation and service. Baggage Solutions prides itself on being a company its customers value and recommend.

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BAGTAG

With BAGTAG, airlines can offer a smarter, faster and easier travel experience. Electronic bag tags (EBT) are the paperless, digital alternative to outdated paper baggage check-in labels. Once passengers run their online check-in, they will receive an electronic version of their baggage tag that syncs with BAGTAG-supported devices.

With BAGTAG, time and touchpoints needed for check-in can be reduced significantly by enabling passengers to arrive at the airport fully prepared for their flight.

It is BAGTAG’s mission to make travelling with checked baggage more comfortable and easier than travelling with carry-on. It is not just providing airlines with the right solutions for that, it is also helping to implement them throughout.

BAGTAG is a Strategic Partner of the FTE Baggage Innovation Working Group.

beSIM

beSIM, part of Manx Telecom Group, is a leading mobile network operator with a 135-year history in telecommunications. It offers revolutionary roaming solutions globally. With agreements in over 170 countries, its network provides unparalleled coverage and connectivity. By partnering with beSIM, you and your customers can instantly connect to its extensive network of over 600 global mobile networks. The advanced API integrations and market-leading eSIM capabilities allow a seamless integration into your own-branded digital channels. No more QR codes – beSIM’s onboarding process is simple and efficient. Its multi-network coverage supports 2G to 5G, enabling data, voice, and SMS services for a truly connected experience. Choose beSIM and unlock new opportunities in connectivity.

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BEUMER Group

BEUMER Group is an international leader in the manufacture of airport baggage handling systems and intralogistics systems for conveying, loading, palletising, packaging, sortation, and distribution. With 4,500 employees worldwide, BEUMER Group has annual sales of about $1.1 billion. BEUMER Group provides customers with high-quality system solutions and an extensive customer support network around the globe and across a wide range of industries, including bulk materials and piece goods, food/non-food, construction, mail order, post, and airport. BEUMER Group is a Strategic Partner of the FTE Baggage Innovation Working Group.

Blueberry Technology

Blueberry Technology Inc is a dynamic San Jose-based startup specialising in innovative, customer-centric solutions for autonomous personal mobility.

The company designs, manufactures, and delivers cutting-edge autonomous personal mobility vehicles. Its primary mission is to tackle last-mile transportation challenges while elevating customer satisfaction to new heights. Blueberry Technology’s inaugural product introduces a fleet-ready, fully-autonomous vehicle meticulously crafted for airport environments. By providing this solution, it empowers all airport users with the freedom to effortlessly navigate and fully experience the airport.

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Blupura USA

Blupura, the Italian manufacturer of POU water dispensers, which uses only natural gases with zero impact on global warming. The use of cutting-edge technologies makes Blupura one of the most innovative companies in the water coolers industry. That’s why Blupura came out with an entirely new product, Unico, the first water station of great design perfect for airports, who want to give to their customers the opportunity to have free cold sparkling and still water at any time.

Brock Solutions

With over 600 employees around the globe, Brock Solutions is a global automation, operational software, and professional services company with expertise in Manufacturing, Transportation, and Utilities business sectors. Its solutions empower clients to transform their operations using real-time data to drive performance, profitability, efficiency, and excellence.

Over the past 25 years, Brock Solutions has successfully completed over $1 billion in baggage handling projects with its partners. It has built an excellent reputation for delivering complex solutions in a wide variety of high volume and high risk industrial and operational environments.

At FTE Global, Brock Solutions will be highlighting and demoing its latest SmartSuite solutions designed to enhance and streamline the passenger and baggage journey.

Brock Solutions is a Strategic Partner of the FTE Baggage Innovation Working Group.

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Chargerback Lost and Found Solutions

Chargerback Lost and Found Solutions is a free, patent-protected, web-based software. Features include Full Inventory Management, A.I. Smart Matching, Single Click shipping, Mobile Application, and Disposition options.

Chargerback is the only patent-protected, cloud-based lost and found software available, and its illustrious partner-base includes more Fortune 100 and 500 companies than all other service providers can claim collectively.

Its business centres around a standard of care that its partners appreciate and have come to expect and will attest that the hands-on and personalised approach is a breath of fresh air when it comes to working with software companies. Best of all, when you ship through Chargerback it is free to your business, requires no software to be installed, and includes free training your staff can access anytime.

CIBTvisas

CIBTvisas is part of CIBT, the leading global provider of immigration and visa services for corporations and individuals. With 30 years of experience, CIBT is the primary service provider to 75% of Fortune 500 companies. CIBT offers a comprehensive suite of services under two primary brands: Newland Chase, a wholly-owned subsidiary focused on global immigration strategy and advisory services for corporations worldwide and CIBTvisas, the market leader for business and other travel visa services for corporate and individual clients.

Learn more about CIBTvisas in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Self-Service Technology, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 13:45-14:30 on 19 September 2023. From the complexity of navigating the visa process to planning high-profile and time-sensitive project moves, companies all over the world depend on CIBTvisas’s global expertise, robust and up-to-date data, and unrivalled experience.

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Cobot Lift

Welcome to Cobot Lift, a trailblazer in collaborative baggage robot solutions. Its latest product COBRO, revolutionises baggage handling, significantly enhancing working conditions and the efficiency of baggage operators.

Cobot Lift understands the challenges baggage operators face daily, which is why COBRO is carefully designed to improve working conditions significantly. By integrating cutting-edge collaborative robots and vacuum lift technology, COBRO automates the lifting process, eliminating physical strain.

By embracing COBRO, airports embrace a culture of care for their workforce, prioritising their safety and comfort.

Cohesive

Cohesive prioritises and designs your journey and your experience. It optimises your assets and fosters collaborations with a line of sight to your business objectives and the challenges that you face. Cohesive understands the core challenges facing our industry: economic performance, carbon reduction and ageing assets, operational reliability and optimising availability. It is here to co-build solutions that operate and function as you want. As a systems integrator, the company delivers digital solutions to minimise risks, and create sustainable value, within your business and ecosystem.

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Copenhagen Optimization

Copenhagen Optimization excels in improving airport operations and does it through data-driven analytics and strategic consultancy combined with innovative software solution Better Airport.

The company passionately believes that operating an airport should be simple and efficient. Better Airport connects the dots between operations, analysis, and planning for the entire airport operation.

Put simply, Better Airport will give you more confidence in the complex, operational decisions you must make, and it will enable you to make them faster.

Working with more than 50 airports globally, Copenhagen Optimization offers its unique services and technology to support airports of all sizes.

Current Components

Current Components offers specialised payment and printer solutions from a wide variety of manufacturers with various competencies. This experience makes it uniquely suited for helping its customers and providing them peace of mind knowing the company delivers optimum “best of breed” solutions. Current Components works closely with its clients and customers from early in the engineering and qualification process all the way through purchasing and managing worldwide logistics. It has built solutions to modernise old equipment, replace discontinued items and upgrade the performance of existing systems.

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Custom America

Specifically, Custom America designs and manufactures a wide range of aviation printers. Its product portfolio offers robust and compact kiosk and attended solutions for boarding pass, luggage tag and ATB printing. Present in over 150 airports, the company leverages the same print-engine for kiosks and check-in counters while integrating RFID, multi-feeder and linerless printing capabilities.  Its designs reduce the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) for airlines and airports alike by utilising a single hardware platform across various printing needs. Custom America also designs and manufactures a wide range of Ticketing, Printing, and Point-of-Sale solutions to meet complete airport infrastructure needs.

Daifuku Airport Technologies

For 100 years, the Daifuku Group, of which Airport Technologies is a key division, has pioneered the development of material handling solutions. Today, it is the number one material handling supplier in the world. The company delivers value to its customers through innovation and meaningful partnerships, deeply understanding their needs, while supporting day-to-day operations and planning for the future. “At Daifuku, Automation That Inspires”.

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Damarel

Damarel is a leading provider of aviation IT solutions, helping airlines, airports, and ground handlers automate and optimise their business. Its solutions cover the entire passenger journey, from check-in to boarding, as well as ground handling operations.
The company’s DCS and Common Use solutions help reduce costs and improve operations. L-DCS is a rapid, cost-effective automated check-in and boarding solution. The Common Use platform is an affordable, scalable solution that helps you boost check-in and gate capacity.
Damarel’s turn management, service capture, and billing solutions help optimise ground handling operations. FiNDnet helps track and manage ground handling operation, so you can ensure that your flights are turned around on time.
For 30 years, Damarel has helped clients worldwide automate their passenger and ground handling operations. It is committed to helping its clients improve their performance while reducing costs.

dormakaba

dormakaba makes access in life smart and secure – by offering a comprehensive portfolio of innovative, secure solutions and services for various building types. In the aviation industry, the company supports airports and airlines to meet the complex challenges posed by access control and security to improve their operating efficiency. Its systematically coordinated solution range includes automated, secure solutions that meet the specific needs of all touchpoints in the passenger process. As one of the top three companies in the industry, dormakaba is the trusted partner for products, solutions and services for access to buildings and rooms from a single source.

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EASE | Enterprise Awareness & Situational Exceptions

Introducing EASE: Your essential data ally for airports. Tired of ‘big box’ tools that overlook airport intricacies? So was EASE. Drawing from frontline airport digital transformations, it has built a platform consolidating complex airport data, automating its collection and visualisation. The result? Actionable insights served on an intuitive dashboard, cutting down hours of work. No more data headaches, just clarity and empowerment. With EASE, you’re not merely adopting a tool, but partnering with an expert team that deeply understands and caters to the airport world.

Collaboration is key to the EASE approach. By working closely with airport stakeholders, it ensures that the insights you see are both comprehensive and deeply relevant, streamlining decision-making processes.

EASIER

EASIER is a leading manufacturer of intelligent passenger processing equipment, serving airports, airlines, immigration, and public transportation. Its comprehensive portfolio includes e-gates, kiosks, baggage drop, exit lanes, printers, and scanners. With curb-to-gate biometrics, DCS, and common use connectivity integration, EASIER ensures seamless operations. Renowned for unmatched reliability and responsive support, its excels at tailoring products to specific needs.

Formed in 2019 through the merger of IER and Automatic Systems, EASIER combines self-service expertise with access control leadership. Impressive numbers speak for themselves, as 100 million people pass through EASIER gates daily.

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eezeetags

eezeetags is the most passenger-friendly paper self-tagging bag-tags. Used at airports and by airlines around the world, 150 million passengers self-tag their bags making use of an eezeetag. By truly empowering passengers, staff shortages are overcome. eezeetags speed up the self-bag-drop process, increasing capacity. With no liners to discard, waste is reduced, as is the health and safety risk of slips, trips and falls. eezeetags are produced and distributed by the eezeetags family of companies, a unique collaboration between the world’s leading bag tag producers. Global coverage, local service.

Embross

Embross is one of the world’s leading passenger service automation providers and delivers seamless experiences to millions of passengers each year. Powering the world’s busiest airlines and airports, Embross helps its travel and service partners achieve greater service capability, efficiency, and experience by leveraging self-service and automation technology.

The company is heavily invested in the provision of passenger self-service and has been for over three decades. Embross continues to innovate and disrupt through its combination of Design > Technology > Agility > User Engagement.

Experience its range of biometric, self-service technologies, as well as airport management solutions, at FTE Global.

Learn more about Embross in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Self-Service Technology, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 13:45-14:30 on 19 September 2023. Embross invites you to a biometric walkthrough of its leading passenger self-service kiosks, self bag drops, and e-gates that deliver a seamless experience.

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EMMA Systems

EMMA Systems helps airports and airlines make their operations efficient and predictable by optimising resource use and increasing operational transparency through its AI platform. It facilitates the implementation of collaborative stakeholder management. All stakeholders can easily adopt the solution and tailor it to their specific business requirements and operating procedures so best-in-class operational efficiency can be guaranteed.

FTE Baggage Innovation Working Group

Following the successful launch of the Baggage Innovation Working Group in 2021, FTE is introducing the expanded BIWG for 2023. The working group brings together the most innovative and progressive baggage supply chain companies, airlines and airports from across the industry to provide a unique platform for the development of new techniques, technologies and business models to deliver tangible change in the baggage sector. It is the industry’s best networking platform for those serious about baggage.

The FTE Baggage Innovation Working Group POC briefing takes place on the Future Travel Experience booth (C1) at 13:45-14:30 on 19 September 2023.

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FTE Digital, Innovation & Startup Hub

The FTE Digital, Innovation & Startup Hub brings together the most forward-thinking airlines, airports, vendors, investors and startups in the air transport industry and provides a unique platform for them to share expertise, discover new partners, collaborate and deliver positive change. In short, the FTE Hub is the industry’s only network designed for the organisations and individuals who are at the forefront of digital transformation and innovation in aviation. Members have access to a number of exclusive benefits throughout the year, including virtual and in-person events and activities, as well as startup pitch sessions.

The FTE Digital, Innovation & Startup Hub POC briefing takes place on the Future Travel Experience booth (C1) at 13:15-13:45 on 20 September 2023.

Gunnebo Entrance Control

Gunnebo is a major global provider of gated control solutions and passenger automation within airports. Its access control solutions provide streamlined, efficient and touchless automated security in support of One ID and single token travel, improving the passenger experience at all key security touchpoints in the terminal. Today’s airports are not just locations where passengers get on and off aircraft. Highest security standards have to be followed, cost-driven efficiency must be achieved, and the best passenger experience provided in this very competitive environment.

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Hallmark Aviation Services & Lost and Found Software.com

Hallmark Aviation Services and LostandFoundSoftware.com provide the leading Lost and Found service. It is utilised by 40 airports worldwide, including SEA, DEN, DFW, LAS, LHR, FRA, AMS, MUC, BNA, and ONT. The software simplifies the reunification process by automating the handling, inventory, and disposal processes. It leverages the latest in image and text recognition AI technology.

Learn more about Hallmark Aviation Services and LostandFoundSoftware.com in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Customer & Employee Empowerment, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 16:00-16:30 on 19 September 2023.

ICM Hub Inc

ICM Hub provides an artificially intelligent (AI) solution to help airlines to keep up with increasing, frequent customer inquiries before, during and after the flight. ICM Hub provides automated, first-class and AI-powered customer interaction, that helps airlines reduce contact centre costs, make crew members more efficient, as well as boost ancillary revenues.

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ID R&D

ID R&D is the leading provider of passive facial liveness and document liveness detection for fast, frictionless, unsupervised verification and authentication of travellers and their documents. That means detecting illegal identity misrepresentation without burdening honest travellers with cumbersome active liveness checks.

The company’s strategic focus on research allows it to discover and deliver category-defining innovations first. This translates to best-in-class accuracy, as evident from numerous awards and #1 rankings in industry challenges. It is also the provider of the only facial liveness detection independently tested and proven to be non-biased. ID R&D is a Mitek company based in New York.

Learn more about ID R&D in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Security, Digital Identity & Biometrics, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 10:15-11:00 on 20 September 2023. In this briefing, ID R&D will show why liveness detection is so essential to automated identity verification and how it is performed on live facial images and documents without posing added friction for travellers.

IEG Business Solutions

IEG is the leading ‘Loyalty and Lounge’ solution provider in Canada and internationally. It creates all software in-house and takes care of even the smallest details. Since the early 1990s, IEG has been developing new solutions for both the airline airport industry, customer loyalty and roadside traffic safety around the world.

At the core of IEG’s mission is the belief that the very best innovation and software solutions are built in partnership with both users and clients. As a family-run business, it is able to make long-term investments in product development to support and keep up with clients’ aspirations and other services to improve customers’ travel experience.

IEG strives to be the leading supplier of beautifully crafted B2B lounge solutions in order to empower airlines and airports to reach their greatest potential and exceed passengers’ expectations.

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imageHOLDERS

imageHOLDERS is a world-class, award-winning digital kiosk manufacturer specialising in self-service airline kiosks. With existing customers such as United, Lufthansa and Swissport, imageHOLDERS can offer end-to-end airline solutions which digitally transform any airline or airport. Digital airline kiosks boast a range of benefits, from enhancing passenger experience to saving on costs by reducing queue times and increasing check-in efficiency. They also provide opportunities for upselling once passengers are in duty free, while enabling the redeployment of staff to other roles within the airport setting.

Kore.ai

Kore.ai is a global leader in enterprise conversational AI platform and solutions helping enterprises automate voice and digital interactions that deliver extraordinary experiences for their customers, contact centre agents and employees worldwide. More than 200 global 2000 companies trust Kore.ai’s experience optimisation (XO) platform and industry solutions to automate conversations and deliver extraordinary outcomes for over 200 million users worldwide. Kore.ai is recognised as an enterprise conversational AI platform market leader by top analysts. The company is headquartered in Florida USA with offices in India, the UK, Japan, South Korea, Europe, South America, and the Middle East.

Learn more about Kore.ai in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Customer & Employee Empowerment, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 16:00-16:30 on 19 September 2023. TravelAssist is a prebuilt self-service AI solution developed by Kore.ai and specifically tailored to the changing needs of the travel industry. This robust Large Language Model (LLM) automates and enhances customer experiences by orchestrating workflows to completely transform and improve the travel experience for both customers and employees.

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Lufthansa Mixed Reality Cabin Demo

Lufthansa, Meta Reality Labs and MSM.digital will be showcasing a Mixed Reality Cabin Demo at FTE Global. The launch of Allegris in February – Lufthansa’s redefined approach to long-haul travel – blended the physical and digital, with the airline’s new Metaverse event location having a key role.

Attendees at FTE Global will hear more on how Lufthansa is leveraging the Metaverse with Mixed Reality to champion new product offerings. There will be dedicated space in the exhibition where attendees can take a VR headset, enter Lufthansa’s Metaverse event location or the Mixed Reality full-scale model of the cabin, and experience Allegris for themselves.

Lufthansa Systems

Lufthansa Systems is a leading airline IT and consulting provider determined to shape the future of digital aviation. The company draws its unique strengths from its ability to combine profound industry know-how with forward-looking technological expertise.

The wholly-owned subsidiary of the Lufthansa Group offers more than 350 customers an extensive range of successful IT products and professional services, many of which are market leaders.

Its pioneering portfolio covers all of an airline’s business processes – in the flight deck, in the cabin and on the ground. As a tech company and airline consulting provider, Lufthansa Systems is committed to identifying its own environmental footprint and improving that of its airline customers.

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Luggage Logistics

Luggage Logistics is a supplier of innovative baggage, passenger and ULD management IT solutions designed for airports, airlines and ground handling companies. Its extensive, cost-effective product suite helps customers to resolve their key operational challenges. Used in major hubs, as well as smaller regional airports, Luggage Logistics provides customers with complete end-to-end baggage and ULD reconciliation and management capabilities, including all key components of IATA Resolution 753.

Aviation Baggage Solutions is its core business – the team is made up of baggage specialists with many years’ experience working within airlines, airports and baggage system suppliers. The company’s approach is to be seen more as a partner rather than just a supplier. Working closely with its customers, Luggage Logistics identifies its specific challenges and supplies innovative solutions that deliver results.

May Mobility

May Mobility is making cities more beautiful and accessible by transforming mobility with autonomous vehicles. Its unique approach to autonomous vehicle technology solves the biggest problem in autonomous driving by safely handling the unexpected. The company helps organisations of all kinds solve their toughest transportation challenges with first- and last-mile on demand and circulator services. May Mobility’s autonomous vehicles offer a path to simpler operations, easier staffing and expanded service hours that meet your full spectrum of needs.

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Mott MacDonald

Mott MacDonald is a $2 billion global management, engineering, and development firm. It is one of the world’s largest employee-owned companies, with 16,000 employees and over 180 offices delivering sustainable outcomes for clients in 150 countries worldwide.

Mott MacDonald’s record of delivery in the aviation industry is second to none. It has worked on some of the largest and most significant aviation projects in the world, including JFK, Heathrow, Hong Kong International, Singapore Changi, New Istanbul, and Los Angeles International, as well as for the airframers Boeing and Airbus.

MT&L

MT&L has four decades of experience providing transactional media that facilitates a smooth and reliable passenger experience. From journey enabling tickets, boarding passes and itineraries, to baggage tags for kiosk, ticket counter, or gate check, its products understated role supports the carrier’s efforts to transport passengers in the most seamless and efficient manner possible. Further support for carrier operations encompasses countless other items ranging from food service and cargo labels to RFID tags for life jackets. Beyond the journey, MT&L provides loyalty programme membership cards, retail and B2C gift cards, UATP cards, and co-branded Visa, Mastercard, or American Express cards.

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Paragon ID – RFiD Discovery

Paragon ID is a global leader in identification solutions in four key activities – Smart Cities & Mass Transit, eID, Payment and Track & Trace – which includes its activities dedicated the aviation sector.

The company’s Track and Trace expertise for the aviation sector includes conventional and RFID baggage tags, as well as a multi-technology fully integrated asset tracking and geolocation platform combining hardware and software to meet clients’ diverse requirements such as trolley and ULD tracking.

Paragon ID has over 30 years’ experience in the aviation sector, providing passenger handling and operational products to airlines and other transportation companies.

Learn more about Paragon ID – RFiD Discovery in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Baggage, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 13:00-13:45 on 19 September 2023. Paragon ID will highlight ‘Tracking on The Tarmac’: tracking bags once they go on and off the aircraft via RFID on conveyor loading belts, as well as BLE/WIFI tags on wheelchairs and trolleys to know the location of that asset.

Pawtrip

Pawtrip will share a full product demo on how customers can add pets and service animals to their flight reservation without calling an airline. It will also do a demonstration on an AI Agent (partnered with NLX) in case someone does call the contact centre. Pawtrip is delighted to have recently launched with the new airline, BermudAir, which it looks forward to demonstrating and having at its booth.

Learn more about Pawtrip in the Startup Showcase as part of the Innovation & Tech Briefings, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 15:30-16:15 on 20 September 2023.

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Plan3

Plan3 is a passenger-focussed disruption management system that puts unrivalled ease of recovery in the hands of customer care teams.

Simply put, Plan3 solves every aspect of passenger disruption, automatically sourcing holistic solutions with eyes on the entire passenger journey.

Using Plan3’s Option Creator tool, airlines can easily bundle together and publish relevant options (eg, new flight, hotel, transportation, digital meal vouchers), and passengers can self-serve their way to a seamless onward journey.

PS

Launched in Los Angeles in spring 2017 as the first private terminal for commercial travel in the United States, PS is located far away from the traffic and bustle of the public terminal. It offers a back door to your commercial aircraft, private TSA and Customs clearance, luxury spaces and white-glove service before and after your flight. Incubated within the renowned security firm, Gavin de Becker & Associates, PS has since grown to serve thousands of members under the lead of Amina Belouizdad Porter as CEO. Currently open in LAX, ATL and coming soon to DFW, MIA, and more.

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Regula

Regula is a global developer of forensic devices and identity verification solutions. With our 30+ years of experience in forensic research and the largest library of document templates in the world, Regula creates breakthrough technologies in document and biometric verification. Its hardware and software solutions allow over 1,000 organizations and 80 border control authorities globally to provide top-notch client service without compromising safety, security or speed. Regula was named a Representative Vendor in the Gartner report “Market Guide for Identity Proofing and Affirmation” in 2022.

Ricardo Beverly Hills

Ricardo Beverly Hills, Inc. is committed to delivering the best in luggage design and innovation in its RICARDO BEVERLY HILLS, SKYWAY LUGGAGE, STEPHANIE JOHNSON, and AMERICAN EXPLORER brands. With global distribution spanning five continents and over 40 countries, the brands are available at major department stores, specialty stores, and online retailers in the United States and worldwide.

At FTE Global, Ricardo Beverly Hills will showcase its brand-new Ricardo Flight Essentials collection of wheeled cases and soft bags designed to handle the demands of professional pilots and flight crews. Flight Essentials’ ten styles feature durability, innovation, and organisation for busy crews who demand the latest in best-in-class materials for their busy careers. There are three-wheeled cases and four soft styles in ballistic nylon Nanotex fabrics with YKK EYL zippers. All styles went through extensive testing at an independent testing facility, with superior results exceeding the competition’s baseline to withstand the rigors of constant travel.

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Rohde & Schwarz USA, Inc.

Rohde & Schwarz develops, produces and markets a wide range of electronic capital goods for industry, infrastructure operators and government customers. The private family-owned company is among the technology and market leaders in all of its business fields, including wireless communications and RF test and measurement, broadcast and media, air traffic control and military radiocommunications, cybersecurity, network technology, and physical security.

In fiscal year 2020/2021, Rohde & Schwarz generated €2.28 billion in revenue. The company owes this tremendous success to its 13,000 highly qualified employees in over 70 countries.

Shabstec Limited

Shabstec specialises in providing products and services to the aviation baggage community. Its solutions process baggage from passenger pick up, check-in to aircraft hold. Shabstec’s low-cost TagForLife innovation is aimed to help reduce the use of baggage tags and provide a simplified passenger travel experience.

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SITA

SITA is the air transport industry’s IT provider, delivering solutions for airlines, airports, aircraft and governments. Its technology powers more seamless, safe and sustainable air travel. With around 2,500 customers, SITA’s solutions drive operational efficiencies at more than 1,000 airports while delivering the promise of the connected aircraft to customers of 18,000 aircraft globally. SITA also provides technology solutions that help more than 70 governments strike the balance of secure borders and seamless travel.

SITA is a certified CarbonNeutral company in accordance with The CarbonNeutral Protocol. SITA is 100% owned by the industry and driven by its needs. It is one of the most internationally diverse companies, providing services in over 200 countries and territories.

SITA is a Strategic Partner of the FTE Baggage Innovation Working Group.

Sittig Technologies

Sittig Technologies believes in transforming the dynamics of airport operations. For over 25 years, the company has been synonymous with innovation and excellence, creating a legacy of trust with airports worldwide.

The heart of Sittig’s technological offerings is the groundbreaking PAXGuide system, which promises to redefine the way airports and airlines communicate with passengers.

Key features:

  • Seamless automation: Whether it’s boarding calls or vital passenger communications, the PAXGuide system ensures timely, automated, and error-free announcements.
  • Multilingual mastery: Addressing the diverse needs of global travellers, the system can broadcast automated messages in over 40 languages, removing communication barriers and promoting an inclusive airport environment.
  • Operational excellence: Designed to simplify and enhance the operational efficiency of both airports and airlines, the PAXGuide system ensures a smoother passenger experience, streamlined processes, and reduced overheads.
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Softtek

Founded in 1982 by a small group of entrepreneurs, Softtek started out in Mexico providing local IT services, and today is a global leader in next-generation digital solutions. The first company to introduce the Nearshore model, Softtek helps Global 2000 organisations build their digital capabilities constantly and seamlessly, from ideation and development to execution and evolution. Its entrepreneurial drive spans 20+ countries and more than 15,000 talented professionals.

Tech4TH Solutions

Tech4TH is an innovative technology company born out of a desire to reimagine the traveller experience using cutting-edge digital technologies. For Tech4TH, travel technology goes beyond making a positive impact on the traveller journey to actually having an “intelligent engagement” with travellers and the communities that its customers operate in. The company uses data and Artificial Intelligence to enable this kind of transformative and seamless traveller experience. Tech4TH brings more than 150 years of cumulative experience of its core team in the travel industry coupled with its own AI accelerators, frameworks and solutions, which reduces the time to build solutions for its customers.

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Thales

Thales provides the trusted technologies that shape the future of air transport. Its offerings are based on three pillars: smart security, biometric passenger journey, and operations efficiency. From check-in to boarding, Thales solutions enable an unmatched travel experience for passengers, airlines, and airports – with no compromise on security.

Transportation Security Administration

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) was created in the aftermath of 9/11 to oversee security in all modes of transportation and completed federalization of security operations by the end of 2002. TSA practices an intelligence-driven, risk-based approach to security, comprising multiple security methods while utilising cutting-edge technology and maintaining a flexible, highly trained workforce.

The TSA Innovation Task Force (ITF) fosters innovation by integrating key stakeholders to identify and demonstrate emerging solutions that increase security effectiveness and efficiency, improve passenger experience, and to deliver solutions that secure the freedom of movement throughout the nation’s transportation system.

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TravelWifi

TravelWifi provides international data connectivity in more than 130 countries without the hassle. Its commercial and business solutions include global eSIMs, portable hotspots and routers, and ISP on a large scale. Internet is a necessity, and TravelWifi’s mission is to solve connectivity challenges for all its travelling customers. Stop by booth F5 to try eSIM for FREE and learn about your alternative data options abroad.

UCPlaces

UCPlaces offers fully-branded, customised GPS-guided tours that your passengers can take on their schedule, in their preferred language and directly from within the airline’s mobile app. When your airline offers unforgettable touring experiences at their destination, customers are sure to return for more.

With UCPlaces, you can differentiate your airline from the competition by offering value which exceeds your customers’ expectations and takes their experience with you well beyond the airplane and airport. Expand your loyalty programmes and generate more revenue while building long-lasting relationships with your valuable customers.

Offering exceptional touring experiences to your customers keeps them coming back to your airline’s app and website. It’s the easiest way to make your customers excited about your airline from the time they touch down until the time they take off.

Learn more about UCPlaces in the Startup Showcase as part of the Innovation & Tech Briefings, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 15:30-16:15 on 20 September 2023. By 2030, most travellers in the world will be taking guided tours using their phone, with UCPlaces you can sell GPS-guided tours to travellers at the right place, at the right time and for the right price. With UCPlaces, customers use your mobile app to take tours of their destination, in their preferred language and on their schedule.

Register for FTE Global 2023 >>

Upstream Works Software

Upstream Works provides enterprise-ready omnichannel contact centre desktop solutions that simplify and improve the agent and customer experience. Its flexible, agent-first desktop solutions support digital transformation and innovation in the travel industry. They enable travel contact centres to enhance agent productivity, personalise interactions with powerful integrations, deliver specialised travel services like video engagements, gain insights with real-time reporting, and operationalise Artificial Intelligence (AI) for enhanced performance, while leveraging existing systems and investments.

The company works with the world’s largest airlines and organisations around the world to help accelerate innovation, optimise efficiency, exceed traveller expectations, and create long-term business value.

Vaask

Vaask’s touchless hand-sanitising fixture provides a superior performance engineered for no drips and no mess. Constructed of cast aluminium, the U.S.-manufactured fixture comes with a five-year warranty. Vaask can be customised to complement the design of any space, and the two-litre cartridge is refillable with any alcohol-based gel. It uses less energy than a nightlight via AC power or Power-over-Ethernet (no batteries to replace).

Learn more about Vaask in the Startup Showcase as part of the Innovation & Tech Briefings, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 15:30-16:15 on 20 September 2023. Join a discussion about how to create healthier spaces with the CEO of hand hygiene company Vaask, which designed a touchless hand sanitizing dispenser that features an online dashboard and app that automatically alert staff when it’s time to refill, ensuring each unit always stays filled. This exclusive technology solves the most common problem with hand sanitizer, as a study this year in the American Journal of Infection Control found 77% of people report dispensers to be empty.

Register for FTE Global 2023 >>

Veridos America

Veridos is a global provider of integrated identity solutions. Governments and public authorities in more than 100 countries trust the company’s uniquely comprehensive product portfolio. The company creates end-to-end solutions and services perfectly tailored to meet every government identity need. These range from paper to security printing, electrical chip components, enrolment, identity management systems, personalisation and issuance, mobile ID solutions, and border control solutions including eGates. Governments can acquire best-in-class passports, ID cards, driver’s licenses, and more, or even the facilities to manufacture their own.

VidTroniX Printers

In addition to being a leading manufacturer and supplier of boarding pass and baggage tag printers for the aviation and travel industry, VidTroniX offers a full line of check-in and security related products. Since 1999, VidTroniX has installed over 100,000 ATP and MAP printers and recently expanded its global presence in the marketplace with major installations in the Middle East – portable check-in stations, incorporation of its printers into large-scale kiosk projects, and RFID baggage tag printers. The new VidTroniX ATP6 printer offers both wireless and Bluetooth connectivity along with 10 print speeds. The embedded Linux operating system facilitates ATP6 remote management and integration into a user’s custom application.

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Vision-Box

Vision-Box is a multinational company with a presence on five continents and over 7,000 digital identity solutions used by more than 700 million citizens every year. The company is a world leader in biometrics seamless travel, automated border management and electronic identity management solutions. Vision-Box’s technology is present in more than 100 travel hubs worldwide. Responsible for the most relevant advances in the use of biometrics, Vision-Box solutions streamline the passenger experience and improve the efficiency of public services to ensure safety, security, and performance.

Headquartered in Portugal, the company has 12 offices around the world, including Australia, Brazil, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, the United States, and India.

Learn more about Vision-Box in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Security, Digital Identity & Biometrics, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 10:15-11:00 on 20 September 2023. Visitors at Vision-Box’s stand at FTE Global can expect a connected journey from home to destination, where they can seamlessly flow through their journey with just a glimpse. Attendees will witness first-hand how the company’s seamless technology enhances the passenger experience, strengthens security measures, and enables airports to operate more efficiently.

Vriba

Vriba has established a robust team encompassing a diverse range of talents, including technical expertise, project management proficiency, verification and validation competence, compliance knowledge, and adeptness in business documentation. Moreover, its team members have garnered extensive experience from their roles within prominent global commercial airlines.

Vriba’s accomplishments include the successful implementation of project portfolio tools and the establishment of effective governance frameworks, which ensure transparency at the C-Suite level regarding portfolio status, associated risks, and issues. This approach has led to enhanced IT resource utilisation and cost optimisation for its organisation.

Learn more about Vriba in the Startup Showcase as part of the Innovation & Tech Briefings, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 15:30-16:15 on 20 September 2023. In the realm of product mapping, Vriba proudly stands as a pioneer, having executed various Platform as a Service (PaaS) solutions for the ‘under the wings’ domain of IT, specifically in commercial analysis. Its involvement spanned across business mapping, testing services, and end-to-end governance.

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WHILL

WHILL connects the world with short-distance mobility products and services. Along with designing and selling short-distance mobility vehicles, WHILL provides Mobility-as-a-Service solutions, offering autonomous and manual transportation services that make public spaces more accessible. WHILL now offers products and services in over 20 countries and regions globally.

Learn more about WHILL in the Innovation & Tech Briefing focused on Robotics & Autonomous Vehicles, which takes place in the FTE Global exhibition at 12:30-13:15 on 20 September 2023. The WHILL Autonomous service allows passengers to be transported to their boarding gate using an autonomous mobility device and a simple touch panel. Users select their destination on a touch screen and the WHILL device does everything else. In some airports, the system is set up to allow passengers to make additional stops at predetermined locations such as restrooms, shops, and restaurants. WHILL North America is in talks with several airports and airlines and will have this device available for demo at FTE Global.

Zartico

Zartico powers the possibilities of place. Makers of the first Destination Operating System, Zartico harnesses and streamlines big data, science, AI, and technology to provide unprecedented visibility into the movement of people and economic opportunities.

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Zebra Technologies

Zebra Technologies helps organizations monitor, anticipate, and accelerate workflows by empowering their frontline and ensuring that everyone and everything is visible, connected and fully optimised. Its award-winning portfolio spans software to innovations in robotics, machine vision, automation and digital decisioning, all backed by a +50-year legacy in scanning, track-and-trace and mobile computing solutions. With an ecosystem of 10,000 partners across more than 100 countries, Zebra’s customers include over 80% of the Fortune 500.

ZestIoT Technologies

ZestIoT Technologies is 6+ years old company with a focus on IoT, camera AI-based end-to-end solutions for multiple industries including aviation (airports, airlines, ground handlers, fuellers, caterers), oil & gas, steel industry, and ports sector. ZestIoT has delivered end-to-end automation solutions for airports, airlines and ground handlers to enable real-time tracking of aircraft, vehicles (ground assets), dollies and containers carrying cargo, enabling the visibility of flight turnaround operations. As a result, aviation customers have observed significant improvement in operational efficiencies, improvement in productivity like additional flights per parking stand and operational cost savings in day-today operations.

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Article originally published here:
FTE Global 2023 exhibitor & sponsor preview – innovative solutions to help airports and airlines enhance end-to-end customer experiences at the “CES of Aviation”

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Government

When Military Rule Supplants Democracy

When Military Rule Supplants Democracy

Authored by Robert Malone via The Brownstone Institute,

If you wish to understand how democracy ended…

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When Military Rule Supplants Democracy

Authored by Robert Malone via The Brownstone Institute,

If you wish to understand how democracy ended in the United States and the European Union, please watch this interview with Tucker Carlson and Mike Benz. It is full of the most stunning revelations that I have heard in a very long time.

The national security state is the main driver of censorship and election interference in the United States.

“What I’m describing is military rule,” says Mike Benz.

“It’s the inversion of democracy.”

Please watch below...

I have also included a transcript of the above interview. In the interests of time – this is AI generated. So, there still could be little glitches – I will continue to clean up the text over the next day or two.

Note: Tucker (who I consider a friend) has given me permission to directly upload the video above and transcript below – he wrote this morning in response to my request:

Oh gosh, I hope you will. It’s important.

Honestly, it is critical that this video be seen by as many people as possible. So, please share this video interview and transcript.

Five points to consider that you might overlook;

First– the Aspen Institute planning which is described herein reminds me of the Event 201 planning for COVID.

Second– reading the comments to Tucker’s original post on “X” with this interview, I am struck by the parallels between the efforts to delegitimize me and the new efforts to delegitimize Mike Benz. People should be aware that this type of delegitimization tactic is a common response by those behind the propaganda to anyone who reveals their tactics and strategies. The core of this tactic is to cast doubt about whether the person in question is unreliable or a sort of double agent (controlled opposition).

Third– Mike Benz mostly focuses on the censorship aspect of all of this, and does not really dive deeply into the active propaganda promotion (PsyWar) aspect.

Fourth– Mike speaks of the influence mapping and natural language processing tools being deployed, but does not describe the “Behavior Matrix” tool kit involving extraction and mapping of emotion. If you want to dive in a bit further into this, I covered this latter part October 2022 in a substack essay titled “Twitter is a weapon, not a business”.

Fifth– what Mike Benz is describing is functionally a silent coup by the US Military and the Deep State. And yes, Barack Obama’s fingerprints are all over this.

Yet another “conspiracy theory” is now being validated.

Transcript of the video:

Tucker Carlson:

The defining fact of the United States is freedom of speech. To the extent this country is actually exceptional, it’s because we have the first amendment in the Bill of Rights. We have freedom of conscience. We can say what we really think.

There’s no hate speech exception to that just because you hate what somebody else thinks. You cannot force that person to be quiet because we’re citizens, not slaves. But that right, that foundational right that makes this country what it is, that right from which all of the rights flow is going away at high speed in the face of censorship. Now, modern censorship, there’s no resemblance to previous censorship regimes in previous countries and previous eras. Our censorship is affected on the basis of fights against disinformation and malformation. And the key thing to know about this is that they’re everywhere. And of course, this censorship has no reference at all to whether what you’re saying is true or not.

In other words, you can say something that is factually accurate and consistent with your own conscience. And in previous versions of America, you had an absolute right to say those things. but now – because someone doesn’t like them or because they’re inconvenient to whatever plan the people in power have, they can be denounced as disinformation and you could be stripped of your right to express them either in person or online. In fact, expressing these things can become a criminal act and is it’s important to know, by the way, that this is not just the private sector doing this.

These efforts are being directed by the US government, which you pay for and at least theoretically owned. It’s your government, but they’re stripping your rights at very high speed. Most people understand this intuitively, but they don’t know how it happens. How does censorship happen? What are the mechanics of it?

Mike Benz is, we can say with some confidence, the expert in the world on how this happens. Mike Benz had the cyber portfolio at the State Department. He’s now executive director of Foundation for Freedom Online, and we’re going to have a conversation with him about a very specific kind of censorship. By the way, we can’t recommend strongly enough, if you want to know how this happens, Mike Benz is the man to read.

But today we just want to talk about a specific kind of censorship and that censorship that emanates from the fabled military industrial complex, from our defense industry and the foreign policy establishment in Washington. That’s significant now because we’re on the cusp of a global war, and so you can expect censorship to increase dramatically. And so with that, here is Mike Benz, executive director of Foundation for Freedom online. Mike, thanks so much for joining us and I just can’t overstate to our audience how exhaustive and comprehensive your knowledge is on this topic. It’s almost unbelievable. And so if you could just walk us through how the foreign policy establishment and defense contractors and DOD and just the whole cluster, the constellation of defense related publicly funded institutions, stripped from us,

Mike Benz:      

Our freedom of speech. Sure. One of the easiest ways to actually start the story is really with the story of internet freedom and it switched from internet freedom to internet censorship because free speech on the internet was an instrument of statecraft almost from the outset of the privatization of the internet in 1991. We quickly discovered through the efforts of the Defense Department, the State Department and our intelligence services, that people were using the internet to congregate on blogs and forums. And at this point, free speech was championed more than anybody by the Pentagon, the State Department, and our sort of CIA cutout NGO blob architecture as a way to support dissident groups around the world in order to help them overthrow authoritarian governments as they were sort of build essentially the internet free speech allowed kind of insta regime change operations to be able to facilitate the foreign policy establishments State Department agenda.     

Google is a great example of this. Google began as a DARPA grant by Larry Page and Sergey Brin when they were Stanford PhDs, and they got their funding as part of a joint CIA NSA program to chart how “birds of a feather flock together online” through search engine aggregation. And then one year later they launched Google and then became a military contractor. Quickly thereafter, they got Google Maps by purchasing a CIA satellite software essentially, and the ability to use free speech on the internet as a way to circumvent state control over media over in places like Central Asia and all around the world, was seen as a way to be able to do what used to be done out of CIA station houses or out of embassies or consulates in a way that was totally turbocharged. And all of the internet free speech technology was initially created by our national security state – VPNs, virtual private networks to hide your IP address, tour the dark web, to be able to buy and sell goods anonymously, end-to-end encrypted chats.    

All of these things were created initially as DARPA projects or as joint CIA NSA projects to be able to help intelligence backed groups, to overthrow governments that were causing a problem to the Clinton administration or the Bush administration or the Obama administration. And this plan worked magically from about 1991 until about 2014 when there began to be an about face on internet freedom and its utility.

Now, the high watermark of the sort of internet free speech moment was the Arab Spring in 2011, 2012 when you had this one by one – all of the adversary governments of the Obama Administration: Egypt, Tunisia, all began to be toppled in Facebook revolutions and Twitter revolutions. And you had the State Department working very closely with the social media companies to be able to keep social media online during those periods. There was a famous phone call from Google’s Jared Cohen to Twitter to not do their scheduled maintenance so that the preferred opposition group in Iran would be able to use Twitter to win that election.            

So free speech was an instrument of statecraft from the national security state to begin with. All of that architecture, all the NGOs, the relationships between the tech companies and the national security state had been long established for freedom. In 2014, after the coup in Ukraine, there was an unexpected counter coup where Crimea and the Donbas broke away and they broke away with essentially a military backstop that NATO was highly unprepared for at the time. They had one last Hail Mary chance, which was the Crimea annexation vote in 2014. And when the hearts and minds of the people of Crimea voted to join the Russian Federation, that was the last straw for the concept of free speech on the internet in the eyes of NATO – as they saw it. The fundamental nature of war changed at that moment. And NATO at that point declared something that they first called the Gerasimov doctrine, which was named after this Russian military, a general who they claimed made a speech that the fundamental nature of war has changed.

(Gerasimov doctrine is the idea that) you don’t need to win military skirmishes to take over central and eastern Europe. All you need to do is control the media and the social media ecosystem because that’s what controls elections. And if you simply get the right administration into power, they control the military. So it’s infinitely cheaper than conducting a military war to simply conduct an organized political influence operation over social media and legacy mediaAn industry had been created that spanned the Pentagon, the British Ministry of Defense and Brussels into a organized political warfare outfit, essentially infrastructure that was created initially stationed in Germany and in Central and eastern Europe to create psychological buffer zones, basically to create the ability to have the military work with the social media companies to censor Russian propaganda and then to censor domestic, right-wing populist groups in Europe who were rising in political power at the time because of the migrant crisis.

So you had the systematic targeting by our state department, by our intelligence community, by the Pentagon of groups like Germany’s AFD, the alternative for Deutsche Land there and for groups in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania. Now, when Brexit happened in 2016, that was this crisis moment where suddenly they didn’t have to worry just about central and eastern Europe anymore. It was coming westward, this idea of Russian control over hearts and minds. And so Brexit was June, 2016. The very next month at the Warsaw Conference, NATO formally amended its charter to expressly commit to hybrid warfare as this new NATO capacity. So they went from basically 70 years of tanks to this explicit capacity building for censoring tweets if they were deemed to be Russian proxies. And again, it’s not just Russian propaganda this, these were now Brexit groups or groups like Mateo Salvini in Italy or in Greece or in Germany or in Spain with the Vox Party.

And now at the time NATO was publishing white papers saying that the biggest threat NATO faces is not actually a military invasion from Russia. It’s losing domestic elections across Europe to all these right-wing populace groups who, because they were mostly working class movements, were campaigning on cheap Russian energy at a time when the US was pressuring this energy diversification policy. And so they made the argument after Brexit, now the entire rules-based international order would collapse unless the military took control over media because Brexit would give rise to Frexit in France with marine Lapin just Brexit in Spain with a Vox party to Italy exit in Italy, to Grexit in Germany, to Grexit in Greece, the EU would come apart, so NATO would be killed without a single bullet being fired. And then not only that, now that NATO’s gone, now there’s no enforcement arm for the International Monetary fund, the IMF or the World Bank. So now the financial stakeholders who depend on the battering ram of the national security state would basically be helpless against governments around the world. So from their perspective, if the military did not begin to censor the internet, all of the democratic institutions and infrastructure that gave rise to the modern world after World War II would collapse. So you can imagine the reaction,

Tucker Carlson:

Wait, ask

Mike Benz:      

Later. Donald Trump won the 2016 election. So

Tucker Carlson:

Well, you just told a remarkable story that I’ve never heard anybody explain as lucidly and crisply as you just did. But did anyone at NATO or anyone at the State Department pause for a moment and say, wait a second, we’ve just identified our new enemy as democracy within our own countries. I think that’s what you’re saying. They feared that the people, the citizens of their own countries would get their way, and they went to war against that.

Mike Benz:      

Yes. Now there’s a rich history of this dating back to the Cold War. The Cold War in Europe was essentially a similar struggle for hearts and minds of people, especially in central and Eastern Europe in these sort of Soviet buffer zones. And starting in 1948, the national security state was really established. Then you had the 1947 Act, which established the Central Intelligence Agency. You had this world order that had been created with all these international institutions, and you had the 1948 UN Declaration on human rights, which forbid the territorial acquisition by military force. So you can no longer run a traditional military occupation government in the way that we could in 1898, for example, when we took the Philippines, everything had to be done through a sort of political legitimization process whereby there’s some ratification from the hearts and minds of people within the country.  

Now, often that involves simply puppet politicians who are groomed as emerging leaders by our State Department. But the battle for hearts and minds had been something that we had been giving ourselves a long moral license leash, if you will, since 1948. One of the godfathers of the CIA was George Kennan. So, 12 days after we rigged the Italian election in 1948 by stuffing ballot boxes and working with the mob, we published a memo called the Inauguration of organized political warfare where Kennan said, “listen, it’s a mean old world out there. We at the CIA just rigged the Italian election. We had to do it because if the Communist won, maybe there’d never be another election in Italy again, but it’s really effective, guys. We need a department of dirty tricks to be able to do this around the world. And this is essentially a new social contract we’re constructing with the American people because this is not the way we’ve conducted diplomacy before, but we are now forbidden from using the war department in 1948.”

They also renamed the war department to the Defense Department. So again, as part of this diplomatic onslaught for political control, rather than it looking like it’s overt military control, but essentially what ended up happening there is we created this foreign domestic firewall. We said that we have a department of dirty tricks to be able to rig elections, to be able to control media, to be able to meddle in the internal affairs of every other plot of dirt in the country.

But this sort of sacred dirt in which the American homeland sits, they are not allowed to operate there. The State Department, the Defense Department, and the CIA are all expressly forbidden from operating on US soil. Of course, this is so far from the case, it’s not even funny, but that’s because of a number of laundering tricks that they’ve developed over 70 years of doing this.

But essentially there was no moral quandary at first with respect to the creation of the censorship industry. When it started out in Germany and in Lithuania and Latvia and Estonia and in Sweden and Finland, there began to be a more diplomatic debate about it after Brexit, and then it became full throttle when Trump was elected. And what little resistance there was was washed over by the rise in saturation of Russiagate, which basically allowed them to not have to deal with the moral ambiguities of censoring your own people.

Because if Trump was a Russian asset, you no longer really had a traditional free speech issue. It was a national security issue. It was only after Russiagate died in July, 2019 when Robert Mueller basically choked on the stand for three hours and revealed he had absolutely nothing. After two and a half years of investigation that the foreign to domestic switcheroo took place where they took all of this censorship architecture, spanning DHS, the FBI, the CIA, the DOD, the DOJ, and then the thousands of government funded NGO and private sector mercenary firms were all basically transited from a foreign predicate, a Russian disinformation predicate to a democracy predicate by saying that disinformation is not just a threat when it comes from the Russians, it’s actually an intrinsic threat to democracy itself.

And so by that, they were able to launder the entire democracy promotion regime change toolkit just in time for the 2020 election.

Tucker Carlson:

I mean, it’s almost beyond belief that this has happened. I mean, my own father worked for the US government in this business in the information war against the Soviet Union and was a big part of that. And the idea that any of those tools would be turned against American citizens by the US government, I think I want to think was absolutely unthinkable in say 1988. And you’re saying that there really hasn’t been anyone who’s raised objections and it’s absolutely turned inward to manipulate and rig our own elections as we would in say Latvia.

Mike Benz:      

Yeah. Well, as soon as the democracy predicate was established, you had this professional class of professional regime change artists and operatives that is the same people who argued that we need to bring democracy to Yugoslavia, and that’s the predicate for getting rid of Milošević or any other country around the world where we basically overthrow governments in order to preserve democracy. Well, if the democracy threat is homegrown now, then that becomes, then suddenly these people all have new jobs moving on the US side, and I can go through a million examples of that. But one thing on what you just mentioned, which is that from their perspective, they just weren’t ready for the internet. 2016 was really the first time that social media had reached such maturity that it began to eclipse legacy media. I mean, this was a long time coming. I think folks saw this building from 2006 through 2016.

Internet 1.0 didn’t even have social media from 1991 to 2004, there was no social media at all. 2004, Facebook came out 2005, Twitter, 2006, YouTube 2007, the smartphone. And in that initial period of social media, nobody was getting subscriber ships at the level where they actually competed with legacy news media. But over the course of being so initially even these dissonant voices within the us, even though they may have been loud in moments, they never reached 30 million followers. They never reached a billion impressions a year type thing. As a uncensored mature ecosystem allowed citizen journalists and independent voices to be able to outcompete legacy news media. This induced a massive crisis both in our military and in our state department in intelligence services. I’ll give you a great example of this in 2019 at meeting of the German Marshall Fund, which is an institution that goes back to the US basically, I don’t want to say bribe, but essentially the soft power economic soft power projection in Europe as part of the reconstruction of European governments after World War ii, to be able to essentially pay them with Marshall Fund dollars and then in return, they basically were under our thumb in terms of how they reconstructed.

But the German Marshall Fund held a meeting in 2019. They held a million of these, frankly, but this was when a four star general got up on the panel and posed the question, what happens to the US military? What happens to the national security state when the New York Times is reduced to a medium sized Facebook page? And he posed this thought experiment as an example of we’ve had these gatekeepers, we’ve had these bumper cars on democracy in the form a century old relationship with legacy media institutions. I mean, our mainstream media is not in any shape or form even from its outset, independent from the national security state, from the state Department, from the war department, you had the initial, all of the initial broadcast news companies, NBC, ABC and CBS were all created by Office of War Information Veterans from the War department’s effort in World War ii.

You had these Operation Mockingbird relationships from the 1950s through the 1970s. Those continued through the use of the National Endowment for Democracy and the privatization of intelligence capacities in the 1980s under Reagan. There’s all sorts of CIA reading room memos you can read even on cia.gov about those continued media relations throughout the 1990s. And so you always had this backdoor relationship between the Washington Post, the New York Times, and all of the major broadcast media corporations. By the way, Rupert Murdoch and Fox are part of this as well. Rupert Murdoch was actually part of the National Endowment for Democracy Coalition in 1983 when it was as a way to do CIA operations in an aboveboard way after the Democrats were so ticked off at the CIA for manipulating student movements in the 1970s. But essentially there was no CIA intermediary to random citizen journalist accounts. There was no Pentagon backstop.

You couldn’t get a story killed. You couldn’t have this favors for favors relationship. You couldn’t promise access to some random person with 700,000 followers who’s got an opinion on Syrian gas. And so this induced, and this was not a problem for the initial period of social media from 2006 to 2014 because there were never dissident groups that were big enough to be able to have a mature enough ecosystem on their own. And all of the victories on social media had gone in the way of where the money was, which was from the State Department and the Defense Department and the intelligence services. But then as that maturity happened, you now had this situation after the 2016 election where they said, okay, now the entire international order might come undone. 70 years of unified foreign policy from Truman until Trump are now about to be broken.

And we need the same analog control systems. We had to be able to put bumper cars on bad stories or bad political movements through legacy media relationships and contacts we now need to establish and consolidate within the social media companies. And the initial predicate for that was Russiagate. But then after Russiagate died and they used a simple democracy promotion predicate, then it gave rise to this multi-billion dollar censorship industry that joins together the military industrial complex, the government, the private sector, the civil society organizations, and then this vast cobweb of media allies and professional fact checker groups that serve as this sort of sentinel class that surveys every word on the internet.

Tucker Carlson:

Thank you again for this almost unbelievable explanation of why this is happening. Can you give us an example of how it happens and just pick one among, I know countless examples of how the national security state lies to the population, censors the truth in real life.

Mike Benz:      

Yeah, so we have this state department outfit called the Global Engagement Center, which was created by a guy named Rick Stengel who described himself as Obama’s propaganda in chief. He was the undersecretary for public affairs essentially, which is the liaison office role between the state department and the mainstream media. So this is basically the exact nexus where government talking points about war or about diplomacy or statecraft get synchronized with mainstream media.

Tucker Carlson:

May I add something to that as someone I know – Rick Stengel. He was at one point a journalist and Rick Stengel has made public arguments against the First Amendment and against Free Speech.

Mike Benz:      

Yeah, he wrote a whole book on it and he published an op-Ed in 2019. He wrote a whole book on it and he made the argument that we just went over here that essentially the Constitution was not prepared for the internet and we need to get rid of the First Amendment accordingly. And he described himself as a free speech absolutist when he was the managing editor of Time Magazine. And even when he was in the State Department under Obama, he started something called the Global Engagement Center, which was the first government censorship operation within the federal government, but it was foreign facing, so it was okay. Now, at the time, they used the homegrown ISIS predicate threat for this. And so it was very hard to argue against the idea of the State Department having this formal coordination partnership with every major tech platform in the US because at the time there were these ISIS attacks that were, and we were told that ISIS was recruiting on Twitter and Facebook.

And so the Global Engagement Center was established essentially to be a state department entanglement with the social media companies to basically put bumper cars on their ability to platform accounts. And one of the things they did is they created a new technology, which it’s called Natural Language processing. It is a artificial intelligence machine learning ability to create meaning out of words in order to map everything that everyone says on the internet and create this vast topography of how communities are organized online, who the major influences are, what they’re talking about, what narratives are emerging or trending, and to be able to create this sort of network graph in order to know who to target and how information moves through an ecosystem. And so they began plotting the language, the prefixes, the suffixes, the popular terms, the slogans that ISIS folks were talking about on Twitter.

When Trump won the election in 2016, everyone who worked at the State Department was expecting these promotions to the White House National Security Council under Hillary Clinton, who I should remind viewers was also Secretary of State under Obama, actually ran the State Department. But these folks were all expecting promotions on November 8th, 2016 and were unceremoniously put out of jobs by a guy who was a 20 to one underdog according to the New York Times the day of the election. And when that happened, these State Department folks took their special set of skills, coercing governments for sanctions. The State Department led the effort to sanction Russia over the Crimea annexation. In 2014, these State Department diplomats did an international roadshow to pressure European governments to pass censorship laws to censor the right-wing populous groups in Europe and as a boomerang impact to censor populace groups who were affiliated in the us.

So you had folks who went from the state department directly, for example, to the Atlanta Council, which was this major facilitator between government to government censorship. The Atlanta Council is a group that is one of Biden’s biggest political backers. They bill themselves as NATO’s Think Tank. So they represent the political census of NATO. And in many respects, when NATO has civil society actions that they want to be coordinated to synchronize with military action or region, the Atlantic Council essentially is deployed to consensus build and make that political action happen within a region of interest to nato.

Now, the Atlantic Council has seven CIA directors on its board. A lot of people don’t even know that seven CIA directors are still alive, let alone all concentrated on the board of a single organization that’s kind of the heavyweight in the censorship industry. They get annual funding from the Department of Defense, the State Department, and CIA cutouts like the National Endowment for Democracy.

The Atlantic Council in January, 2017 moved immediately to pressure European governments to pass censorship laws to create a transatlantic flank tank on free speech in exactly the way that Rick Stengel essentially called for to have us mimic European censorship laws. One of the ways they did this was by getting Germany to pass something called Nets DG in August, 2017, which was essentially kicked off the era of automated censorship in the us. What Nets DG required was, unless social media platforms wanted to pay a $54 million fine for each instance of speech, each post left up on their platform for more than 48 hours that had been identified as hate speech, they would be fined basically into bankruptcy when you aggregate 54 million over tens of thousands of posts per day. And the safe haven around that was if they deployed artificial intelligence based censorship technologies, which had been again created by DARPA to take on ISIS to be able to scan and ban speech automatically.

And this gave rise to what I call these weapons of mass deletion. These are essentially the ability to sensor tens of millions of posts with just a few lines of code. And the way this is done is by aggregating basically the field of censorship science fuses together two disparate groups of study, if you will. There’s the sort of political and social scientists who are the sort of thought leaders of what should be censored, and then there are the sort of quants, if you will. These are the programmers, the computational data scientists, computational Linguistics University.

There’s over 60 universities now who get federal government grants to do the censorship work and the censorship preparation work where what they do is they create these code books of the language that people use the same way they did for isis. They did this, for example, with COVID. They created these COVID lexicons of what dissident groups were saying about mandates, about masks, about vaccines, about high profile individuals like Tony Fauci or Peter Daszak or any of these protected VIPs and individuals whose reputations had to be protected online.

And they created these code books, they broke things down into narratives. The Atlanta Council, for example, was a part of this government funded consortium, something called the Virality Project, which mapped 66 different narratives that dissidents we’re talking about around covid, everything from COVID origins to vaccine efficacy. And then they broke down these 66 claims into all the different factual sub claims. And then they plugged these into these essentially machine learning models to be able to have a constant world heat map of what everybody was saying about covid. And whenever something started trend that was bad for what the Pentagon wanted or was bad for what Tony Fauci wanted, they were able to take down tens of millions of posts. They did this in the 2020 election with mail-in ballots. It was the same. Wait,

Tucker Carlson:

There’s so much here and it’s so shocking. So you’re saying the Pentagon, our Pentagon, the US Department of Defense censored Americans during the 2020 election cycle?

Mike Benz:      

Yes, they did this through the, so the two most censored events in human history, I would argue to date are the 2020 election and the COVID-19 pandemic, and I’ll explain how I arrived there.

So the 2020 election was determined by mail-in ballots, and I’m not weighing into the substance of whether mail-in ballots were or were not a legitimate or safe and reliable form of voting. That’s a completely independent topic from my perspective.

Then the censorship issue one, but the censorship of mail-in ballots is really one of the most extraordinary stories in our American history. I would argue what happened was is you had this plot within the Department of Homeland Security. Now this gets back to what we were talking about with the State Department’s Global Engagement Center. You had this group within the Atlanta Council and the Foreign Policy Establishment, which began arguing in 2017 for the need for a permanent domestic censorship government office to serve as a quarterback for what they called a whole of society counter misinformation, counter disinformation alliance.

That just means censorship. To counter “miss-dis-info”. But their whole society model explicitly proposed that we need every single asset within society to be mobilized in a whole of society effort to stop misinformation online. It was that much of an existential threat to democracy, but they fixated in 2017 that it had to be centered within the government because only the government would have the clout and the coercive threat powers and the perceived authority to be able to tell the social media companies what to do to be able to summon a government funded NGO Swarm to create that media surround sound to be able to arm an AstroTurf army of fact checkers and to be able to liaise and connect all these different censorship industry actors into a cohesive unified hole. And the Atlantic Council initially proposed with this blueprint called Forward defense. “It’s not offense, it’s Forward Defense” guys.

They initially proposed that running this out of the State Department’s Global Engagement Center because they had so many assets there who were so effective at censorship under Rick Stengel, under the Obama administration. But they said, oh, we are not going to be able to get away with that. We don’t really have a national security predicate and it’s supposed to be foreign facing. We can’t really use that hook unless we have a sort of national security one. Then they contemplated parking it, the CIA, and they said, well, actually there’s two reasons we can’t do that. The is a foreign facing organization and we can’t really establish a counterintelligence threat to bring it home domestically. Also, we’re going to need essentially tens of thousands of people involved in this operation spanning this whole society model, and you can’t really run a clandestine operation that way. So they said, okay, well what about the FBI?

They said, well, the FBI would be great, it’s domestic, but the problem is is the FBI is supposed to be the intelligence arm of the Justice Department. And what we’re dealing with here are not acts of law breaking, it’s basically support for Trump. Or if a left winging popularist had risen to power like Bernie Sanders or Jeremy Corbin, I have no doubt they would’ve done in the UK. They would’ve done the same thing to him there. They targeted Jeremy Corbin and other left-wing populist NATO skeptical groups in Europe, but in the US it was all Trump.

And so essentially what they said is, well, the only other domestic intelligence equity we have in the US besides the FBI is the DHS. So we are going to essentially take the CIA’s power to rig and bribe foreign media organizations, which is the power they’ve had since the day they were born in 1947. And we’re going to combine that with the power with the domestic jurisdiction of the FBI by putting it at DHS. So DHS was basically deputized. It was empowered through this obscure little cybersecurity agency to have the combined powers that the CIA has abroad with the jurisdiction of the FBI at home. And the way they did this, how did a cyber, an obscure little cybersecurity agency get this power was they did a funny little series of switcheroos. So this little thing called CISA, they didn’t call it the Disinformation Governance Board. They didn’t call it the Censorship Agency. They gave it an obscure little name that no one would notice called the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) who his founder said, we care about security so much, it’s in our name twice. Everybody sort of closed their eyes and pretended that’s what it was. CISA was created by Active Congress in 2018 because of the perceived threat that Russia had hacked the 2016 election.

And so we needed the cybersecurity power to be able to deal with that. And essentially on the heels of a CIA memo on January 6th, 2017 and a same day DHS executive order on January 6th, 2017, arguing that Russia had interfered in the 2016 election and a DHS mandate saying that elections are now critical infrastructure, you had this new power within DHS to say that cybersecurity attacks on elections are now our purview. And then they did two cute things. One they said said, miss dis and Malformation online are a form of cybersecurity attack. They are a cyber attack because they are happening online. And they said, well, actually Russian disinformation is we’re actually protecting democracy and elections. We don’t need a Russian predicate after Russiagate died. So just like that, you had this cybersecurity agency be able to legally make the argument that your tweets about mail-in ballots if you undermine public faith and confidence in them as a legitimate form of voting was now you were now conducting a cyber attack on US critical infrastructure articulating misinformation on Twitter and just like that.

Tucker Carlson:

Wait- in other words, complaining about election fraud is the same as taking down our power grid.

Mike Benz:      

Yes, you could literally be on your toilet seat at nine 30 on a Thursday night and tweet, I think that mail-in ballots are illegitimate. And you were essentially then caught up in the crosshairs of the Department of Homeland Security classifying you as conducting a cyber attack on US critical infrastructure because you were doing misinformation online in the cyber realm. And misinformation is a cyber attack on democracy when it undermines public faith and confidence in our democratic elections and our democratic institutions, they would end up going far beyond that. They would actually define democratic institutions as being another thing that was a cybersecurity attack to undermine and lo and behold, the mainstream media is considered a democratic institution that would come later. What ended up happening was in the advance of the 2020 election, starting in April of 2020, although this goes back before you had this essentially never Trump NeoCon Republican DHS working with essentially NATO on the national security side and essentially the DNC, if you will, to use DHS as the launching point for a government coordinated mass censorship campaign spanning every single social media platform on earth in order to preens the ability to dispute the legitimacy of mail-in ballots.

And here’s how they did this. They aggregated four different institutions. Stanford University, the University of Washington, a company called Graphica and the Atlantic Council. Now all four of these institutions, the centers within them were essentially Pentagon cutouts you had at the Stanford Air Observatory. It was actually run by Michael McFaul, if you know Michael McFaul. He was the US ambassador to Russia under the Obama administration, and he personally authored a seven step playbook for how to successfully orchestrate a color revolution. And part of that involved maintaining total control over media and social media juicing up the civil society outfits, calling elections illegitimate in order to. Now, mind you, all of these people were professional Russia, Gators and professional election delegitimizes in 2016, and then I’ll get that in a sec. So Stanford, the Stanford Observatory under Michael McFaul was run by Alex Stamos, who was formerly a Facebook executive who coordinated with ODNI and with respect to Russiagate taking down Russian propaganda at Facebook.

So this is another liaison essentially to the national security state. And under Alex Stamos at Sanford Observatory was Renee Diresta, who started her career in the CIA and wrote the Senate Intelligence Committee report on Russian disinformation, and there’s a lot more there that I’ll get to another time. But the next institution was the University of Washington, which is essentially the Bill Gates University in Seattle who is headed by Kate Starboard, who is basically three generations of military brass who got our PhD in crisis informatics, essentially doing social media surveillance for the Pentagon and getting DARPA funding and working essentially with the national security state, then repurposed to take on mail-in ballots. The third firm Graphica got $7 million in Pentagon grants and got their start as part of the Pentagon’s Minerva initiative. The Minerva Initiative is the Psychological Warfare Research Center of the Pentagon. This group was doing social media spying and narrative mapping for the Pentagon until the 2016 election happened, and then were repurposed into a partnership with the Department of Homeland Security to censor 22 million Trump tweets, pro-Trump tweets about mail-in ballots.

And then the fourth institution, as I mentioned, was the Atlantic Council who’s got seven CIA directors on the board, so one after another. It is exactly what Ben Rhodes described during the Obama era as the blob, the Foreign Policy Establishment, it’s the Defense Department, the State Department or the CIA every single time. And of course this was because they were threatened by Trump’s foreign policy, and so while much of the censorship looks like it’s coming domestically, it’s actually by our foreign facing department of Dirty tricks, color revolution blob, who were professional government toppers who were then basically descended on the 2020 election.

Now they did this, they explicitly said the head of this election integrity partnership on tape and my foundation clipped them, and it’s been played before Congress and it’s a part of the Missouri Biden lawsuit now, but they explicitly said on tape that they were set up to do what the government was banned from doing itself, and then they articulated a multi-step framework in order to coerce all the tech companies to take censorship actions.

They said on tape that the tech companies would not have done it but for the pressure, which involved using threats of government force because they were the deputized arm of the government. They had a formal partnership with the DHS. They were able to use DHS’ proprietary domestic disinformation switchboard to immediately talk to top brass at all the tech companies for takedowns, and they bragged on tape about how they got the tech companies to all systematically adopt a new terms of service speech violation ban called delegitimization, which meant any tweet, any YouTube video, any Facebook post, any TikTok video, any discord posts, any Twitch video, anything on the internet that undermine public faith and confidence in the use of mail-in ballots or early voting drop boxes or ballot tabulation issues on election day was a prima fascia terms of service violation policy under this new delegitimization policy that they only adopted because of pass through government pressure from the election integrity partnership, which they bragged about on tape, including the grid that they used to do this, and simultaneously invoking threats of government breaking them up or government stopping doing favors for the tech companies unless they did this as well as inducing crisis PR by working with their media allies.

And they said DHS could not do that themselves. And so they set up this basically constellation of State Department, Pentagon and IC networks to run this censorship campaign, which by their own math had 22 million tweets on Twitter alone, and mind you, they just on 15 platforms, this is hundreds of millions of posts which were all scanned and banned or throttled so that they could not be amplified or they exist in a sort of limited state purgatory or had these frictions affixed to them in the form of fact-checking labels where you couldn’t actually click through the thing or you had to, it was an inconvenience to be able to share it. Now, they did this seven months before the election because at the time they were worried about the perceived legitimacy of a Biden victory in the case of a so-called Red Mirage Blue Shift event.

They knew the only way that Biden would win mathematically was through the disproportionate Democrat use of mail-in ballots. They knew there would be a crisis because it was going to look extremely weird if Trump looked like he won by seven states and then three days later it comes out actually the election switch, I mean that would put the election crisis of the Bush Gore election on a level of steroids that the National Security state said, well, the public will not be prepared for. So what we need to do is we need to in advance, we need to preens the ability to even question legitimacy.

Tucker Carlson:

Out, wait, wait, may I ask you to pause right there? Key influences by, so what you’re saying is what you’re suggesting is they knew the outcome of the election seven months before it was held.

Mike Benz:      

It looks very bad.

Tucker Carlson:

Yes, Mike. It does look very bad

Mike Benz:      

And especially when you combine this with the fact that this is right on the heels of the impeachment. The Pentagon led and the CIA led impeachment. It was Eric ? from the CIA, and it was Vindman from the Pentagon who led the impeachment of Trump in late 2019 over an alleged phone call around withholding Ukraine aid. This same network, which came straight out of the Pentagon hybrid warfare military censorship network, created after the first Ukraine crisis in 2014 were the lead architects of the Ukraine impeachment in 2019, and then essentially came back on steroids as part of the 2020 election censorship operation. But from their perspective, I mean it certainly looks like the perfect crime. These were the people. DHS at the time had actually federalized much of the National Election Administration through this January 6th, 2017 executive order from outgoing Obama. DHS had Jed Johnson, which essentially wrapped all 50 states up into a formal DHS partnership. So DHS was simultaneously in charge of the administration of the election in many respects, and the censorship of anyone who challenged the administration of the election. This is like putting essentially the defendant of a trial as the judge and jury of the trial. It was

Tucker Carlson:

Very, but you’re not describing democracy. I mean, you’re describing a country in which democracy is impossible.

Mike Benz:      

What I’m essentially describing is military rule. I mean, what’s happened with the rise of the censorship industry is a total inversion of the idea of democracy itself. Democracy sort draws its legitimacy from the idea that it is ruled by consent of the people being ruled. That is, it’s not really being ruled by an overlord because the government is actually just our will expressed by our consent with who we vote for. The whole push after the 2016 election and after Brexit and after a couple of other social media run elections that went the wrong way from what the State Department wanted, like the 2016 Philippines election, was to completely invert everything that we described as being the underpinnings of a democratic society in order to deal with the threat of free speech on the internet. And what they essentially said is, we need to redefine democracy from being about the will of the voters to being about the sanctity of democratic institutions and who are the democratic institutions?

Oh, it’s the military, it’s NATO, it’s the IMF and the World Bank. It’s the mainstream media, it is the NGOs, and of course these NGOs are largely state department funded or IC funded. It’s essentially all of the elite establishments that were under threat from the rise of domestic populism that declared their own consensus to be the new definition of democracy. Because if you define democracy as being the strength of democratic institutions rather than a focus on the will of the voters, then what you’re left with is essentially democracy is just the consensus building architecture within the Democrat institutions themselves. And from their perspective, that takes a lot of work. I mean, the amount of work these people do. I mean, for example, we mentioned the Atlantic Council, which is one of these big coordinating mechanisms for the oil and gas industry in a region for the finance and the JP Morgans and the BlackRocks in a region for the NGOs in the region, for the media, in the region, all of these need to reach a consensus, and that process takes a lot of time, it takes a lot of work and a lot of negotiation from their perspective.

That’s democracy. Democracy is getting the NGOs to agree with BlackRock, to agree with the Wall Street Journal, to agree with the community and activist groups who are onboarded with respect to a particular initiative that is the difficult vote building process from their perspective.

At the end of the day, a bunch of populous groups decide that they like a truck driver who’s popular on TikTok more than the carefully constructed consensus of the NATO military brass. Well then from their perspective, that is now an attack on democracy, and this is what this whole branding effort was. And of course, democracy again has that magic regime change predicate where democracy is our magic watchword to be able to overthrow governments from the ground up in a sort of color revolution style whole of society effort to topple a democratically elected government from the inside, for example, as we did in Ukraine, Victor Jankovich was democratically elected by the Ukrainian people like him or hate him.

I’m not even issuing an opinion, but the fact is we color revolution him out of office. We January 6th out of office, actually, to be frank, I mean with respect to the, you had a state department funded right sector thugs and 5 billion worth of civil society money pumped into this to overthrow democratically elected government in the name of democracy, and they took that special set of skills home and now it’s here, perhaps potentially to stay. And this has fundamentally changed the nature of American governance because of the threat of one small voice becoming popular on social media.

Tucker Carlson:

May I ask you a question? So into that group of institutions that you say now define democracy, the NGOs foreign policy establishment, et cetera, you included the mainstream media. Now in 2021, the NSA broke into my private text apps and read them and then leaked them to the New York Times against me. That just happened again to me last week, and I’m wondering how common that is for the Intel agencies to work with so-called mainstream media like the New York Times to hurt their opponents.

Mike Benz:      

Well, that is the function of these interstitial government funded non-governmental organizations and think tanks like for example, we mentioned the Atlantic Council, which is NATO’s think tank, but other groups like the Aspen Institute, which draws the lion’s share of its funding from the State department and other government agencies. The Aspen Institute was busted doing the same thing with the Hunter Biden laptop censorship. You had this strange situation where the FBI had advanced knowledge of the pending publication of the Hunter Biden laptop story, and then magically the Aspen Institute, which is run by essentially former CIA, former NSA, former FBI, and then a bunch of civil society organizations all hold a mass stakeholder censorship simulation, a three day conference, this came out and yo Roth was there. This is a big part of the Twitter file leaks, and it’s been mentioned in multiple congressional investigations.

But somehow the Aspen Institute, which is basically an addendum of the National Security state, got the exact same information that the National Security State spied on journalists and political figures to obtain, and not only leaked it, but then basically did a joint coordinated censorship simulator in September, two months before the election in order just like with the censorship of mail-in ballots to be in ready position to screens anyone online amplifying, wait a second, a news story that had not even broken yet.

Tucker Carlson:

The Aspen Institute, which is by the way, I’ve spent my life in Washington. It’s kind a, I mean Walter Isaacson formerly of Time Magazine ran it, former president of CNNI had no idea it was part of the national security state. I had no idea its funding came from the US government. This is the first time I’ve ever heard that. But given, assuming what you’re saying is true, it’s a little weird or starnge that Walter Isaacson left Aspens to write a biography of Elon Musk?

Mike Benz:      

No? Yeah, I don’t know. I haven’t read that book. From what I’ve heard from people, it’s a relatively fair treatment. I just total speculation. But I suspect that Walter Isaacson has struggled with this issue and may not even firmly fall in one particular place in the sense that Walter Isaacson did a series of interviews of Rick Gel actually with the Atlantic Council and in other settings where he interviewed Rick Gel specifically on the issue of the need to get rid of the First Amendment and the threat that free speech on social media poses to democracy. Now, at the time, I was very concerned, this was between 2017 and 2019 when he did these Rick Stangle interviews. I was very concerned because Isaacson expressed what seemed to me to be a highly sympathetic view about the Rick Stengel perspective on killing the First Amendment. Now, he didn’t formally endorse that position, but it left me very skittish about Isaacson.

But what I should say is at the time, I don’t think very many people, in fact, I know virtually nobody in the country had any idea how deep the rabbit hole went when it came to the construction of the censorship industry and how deep the tentacles had grown within the military and the national security state in order to buoy and consolidate it. Much of that frankly did not even come to public light until even last year. Frankly, some of that was galvanized by Elon Musk’s acquisition and the Twitter files and the Republican turnover in the house that allowed these multiple investigations, the lawsuits like Missouri v Biden and the discovery process there and multiple other things like the Disinformation governance board, who, by the way, the interim head of that, the head of that Nina Janowitz got her start in the censorship industry from this exact same clandestine intelligence community censorship network created after the 2014 Crimea situation.

Nina Janowitz, when her name came up in 2022 as part of the disinformation governance board, I almost fell out of my chair because I had been tracking Nina’s network for almost five years at that point when her name came up as part of the UK inner cluster cell of a busted clandestine operation to censor of the internet called the Integrity Initiative, which was created by the UK Foreign Office and was backed by NATO’s Political Affairs Unit in order to carry out this thing that we talked about at the beginning of this dialogue, the NATO sort of psychological inoculation and the ability to kill, so-called Russian propaganda or rising political groups who wanted to maintain energy relations with Russia at a time when the US was trying to kill the Nord Stream and other pipeline relations. Well,

Well, Nina Janowitz was a part of this outfit, and then who was the head of it after Nina Janowitz went down, it was Michael Chertoff and Michael Chertoff was running the Aspen Institute Cyber Group. And then the Aspen Institute then goes on to be the censorship simulator for the Hunter Biden laptop story. And then two years later, Chertoff is then the head of the disinformation governance board after Nina is forced to step down.

Tucker Carlson:

Tucker Carlson: Of course, Michael Chertoff was the chairman of the largest military contractor in Europe, BAE military. So it’s all connected. You’ve blown my mind so many times in this conversation that I’m going to need a nap directly after it’s done. So I’ve just got two more questions for you, one short one, a little longer short. One is for people who’ve made it this far an hour in and want to know more about this topic. And by the way, I hope you’ll come back whenever you have the time to explore different threads of this story. But for people who want to do research on their own, how can your research on this be found on the internet?

Mike Benz:      

Sure. So our foundation is foundation for freedom online.com. We publish all manner of reports on every aspect of the censorship industry from what we talked about with the role of the military industrial complex and the national security state to what the universities are doing to, I sometimes refer to as digital MK Ultra. There’s just the field of basically the science of censorship and the funding of these psychological manipulation methods in order to nudge people into different belief systems as they did with covid, as they did with energy. And every sensitive policy issue is what they essentially had an ambition for. But so my foundationforfreedomonline.com website is one way. The other way is just on X. My handle is at @MikeBenzCyber. I’m very active there and publish a lot of long form video and written content on all this. I think it’s one of the most important issues in the world today.

Tucker Carlson:

So it certainly is. And so that leads directly and seamlessly to my final question, which is about X. And I’m not just saying this because I post content there, but I think objectively it’s the last big platform that’s free or sort of free or more free. You post there too, but we’re at the very beginning of an election year with a couple of different wars unfolding simultaneously in 2024. So do you expect that that platform can stay free for the duration of this year?

Mike Benz:      

It’s under an extraordinary amount of pressure, and that pressure is going to continue to mount as the election approaches. Elon Musk is a very unique individual, and he has a unique buffer, perhaps when it comes to the national security state because the national security state is actually quite reliant on Elon Musk properties, whether that’s for the electrical, the Green Revolution when it comes to Tesla and the battery technology there. When it comes to SpaceX, the State Department is hugely dependent on SpaceX because of its unbelievable sort of pioneering and saturating presence in the field of low earth orbit satellites that are basically how our telecom system runs to things like starlink. There are dependencies that the National Security state has on Elon Musk. I’m not sure he’d have as much room to negotiate if he had become the world’s richest man selling at a lemonade stand, and if the national security state goes too hard on him by invoking something like CFIUS to sort of nationalize some of these properties.

I think the shock wave that it would send to the international investor community would be irrecoverable at a time when we’re engaged in great power competition. So they’re trying to sort of induce, I think a sort of corporate regime change through a series of things involving a sort of death by a thousand paper cuts. I think there’s seven or eight different Justice Department or SEC or FTC investigations into Elon Musk properties that all started after his acquisition of X. But then what they’re trying to do right now is what I call the Transatlantic Flank Attack 2.0. We talked in this dialogue about how the censorship industry really got its start when a bunch of State Department exiles who were expecting promotions took their special set of skills in coercing European countries to pass sanctions on themselves, to cut off their own leg off to spite themselves in order to pass sanctions on Russia.   

They ran back that same playbook with doing a roadshow for censorship instead for sanctions. We are now witnessing Transatlantic Flank attack 2.0, if you will, which is because they have lost a lot of their federal government powers to do this same censorship operation they had been doing from 2018 to 2022. In part because the house has totally turned on them, in part because of the media, in part because Missouri v Biden, which won a slam dunk case, actually banning government censorship at the trial court and appellate court levels. It is now before the Supreme Court, they’ve now moved into two strategies.

One of them is state level censorship laws. California just passed a new law, which the censorship industry totally drove from start to finish around, they call it platform accountability and transparency, which is basically forcing Elon Musk to give over the kind of narrative mapping data that these CIA conduits and Pentagon cutouts were using to create these weapons of mass deletion, these abilities to just censor everything at scale because they had all the internal platform data. Elon Musk took that away.

They’re using state laws like this new California law to crack that open. But the major threat right now is the threat from Europe with something called the EU Digital Services Act, which was cooked up in tandem with folks like NewsGuard, which has a board of Michael Hayden, head of the CIA NSA and a Fourstar General. Rick Stengel is on that board from the state department’s propaganda office. Tom Ridge is on that board from the Department of Homeland Security. Oh, and Anders Fogh Rasmussen – he was the general secretary of NATO under the Obama administration. So you have NATO, the CIA, the NSA four star General DHS, and the State Department working with the EU to craft the censorship laws that now are the largest existential threat to X other than potentially advertiser boycotts. Because there is now disinformation is now banned as a matter of law in the EU.  

The EU is a bigger market for X than the us. There’s only 300 million in the USA. But there is 450 million people in Europe. X is now forced to comply with this brand new law that just got ratified this year where they either need to forfeit 6% of their global annual revenue to the EU to maintain operations there, or put in place essentially the kind of CIA bumper cars, if you will, that I’ve been describing over the course of this in order to have a internal mechanism to sensor anything that the eu, which is just a proxy for NATO deems to be disinformation. And you can bet with 65 elections around the globe this year, you can predict every single time what they’re going to define disinformation as. So that’s the main fight right now is dealing with the transatlantic flank attack from Europe.

Tucker Carlson:

This is just one of the most remarkable stories I’ve ever heard, and I’m grateful to you for bringing it to us. Mike Benz, executive director of the Foundation for Freedom Online, and I hope we see you again in

Mike Benz:      

Thanks, Tucker.

Tucker Carlson:

Free speech is bigger than any one person or any one organization. Societies are defined by what they will not permit. What we’re watching is the total inversion of virtue.

*  *  *

Republished from the author’s Substack

Tyler Durden Fri, 03/08/2024 - 23:00

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Government

Angry Shouting Aside, Here’s What Biden Is Running On

Angry Shouting Aside, Here’s What Biden Is Running On

Last night, Joe Biden gave an extremely dark, threatening, angry State of the Union…

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Angry Shouting Aside, Here's What Biden Is Running On

Last night, Joe Biden gave an extremely dark, threatening, angry State of the Union address - in which he insisted that the American economy is doing better than ever, blamed inflation on 'corporate greed,' and warned that Donald Trump poses an existential threat to the republic.

But in between the angry rhetoric, he also laid out his 2024 election platform - for which additional details will be released on March 11, when the White House sends its proposed budget to Congress.

To that end, Goldman Sachs' Alec Phillips and Tim Krupa have summarized the key points:

Taxes

While railing against billionaires (nothing new there), Biden repeated the claim that anyone making under $400,000 per year won't see an increase in their taxes.  He also proposed a 21% corporate minimum tax, up from 15% on book income outlined in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), as well as raising the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28% (which would promptly be passed along to consumers in the form of more inflation). Goldman notes that "Congress is unlikely to consider any of these proposals this year, they would only come into play in a second Biden term, if Democrats also won House and Senate majorities."

Biden also called on Congress to restore the pandemic-era child tax credit.

Immigration

Instead of simply passing a slew of border security Executive Orders like the Trump ones he shredded on day one, Biden repeated the lie that Congress 'needs to act' before he can (translation: send money to Ukraine or the US border will continue to be a sieve).

As immigration comes into even greater focus heading into the election, we continue to expect the Administration to tighten policy (e.g., immigration has surged 20pp the last 7 months to first place with 28% in Gallup’s “most important problem” survey). As such, we estimate the foreign-born contribution to monthly labor force growth will moderate from 110k/month in 2023 to around 70-90k/month in 2024. -GS

Ukraine

Biden, with House Speaker Mike Johnson doing his best impression of a bobble-head, urged Congress to pass additional assistance for Ukraine based entirely on the premise that Russia 'won't stop' there (and would what, trigger article 5 and WW3 no matter what?), despite the fact that Putin explicitly told Tucker Carlson he has no further ambitions, and in fact seeks a settlement.

As Goldman estimates, "While there is still a clear chance that such a deal could come together, for now there is no clear path forward for Ukraine aid in Congress."

China

Biden, forgetting about all the aggressive tariffs, suggested that Trump had been soft on China, and that he will stand up "against China's unfair economic practices" and "for peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait."

Healthcare

Lastly, Biden proposed to expand drug price negotiations to 50 additional drugs each year (an increase from 20 outlined in the IRA), which Goldman said would likely require bipartisan support "even if Democrats controlled Congress and the White House," as such policies would likely be ineligible for the budget "reconciliation" process which has been used in previous years to pass the IRA and other major fiscal party when Congressional margins are just too thin.

So there you have it. With no actual accomplishments to speak of, Biden can only attack Trump, lie, and make empty promises.

Tyler Durden Fri, 03/08/2024 - 18:00

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International

United Airlines adds new flights to faraway destinations

The airline said that it has been working hard to "find hidden gem destinations."

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Since countries started opening up after the pandemic in 2021 and 2022, airlines have been seeing demand soar not just for major global cities and popular routes but also for farther-away destinations.

Numerous reports, including a recent TripAdvisor survey of trending destinations, showed that there has been a rise in U.S. traveler interest in Asian countries such as Japan, South Korea and Vietnam as well as growing tourism traction in off-the-beaten-path European countries such as Slovenia, Estonia and Montenegro.

Related: 'No more flying for you': Travel agency sounds alarm over risk of 'carbon passports'

As a result, airlines have been looking at their networks to include more faraway destinations as well as smaller cities that are growing increasingly popular with tourists and may not be served by their competitors.

The Philippines has been popular among tourists in recent years.

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United brings back more routes, says it is committed to 'finding hidden gems'

This week, United Airlines  (UAL)  announced that it will be launching a new route from Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR) to Morocco's Marrakesh. While it is only the country's fourth-largest city, Marrakesh is a particularly popular place for tourists to seek out the sights and experiences that many associate with the country — colorful souks, gardens with ornate architecture and mosques from the Moorish period.

More Travel:

"We have consistently been ahead of the curve in finding hidden gem destinations for our customers to explore and remain committed to providing the most unique slate of travel options for their adventures abroad," United's SVP of Global Network Planning Patrick Quayle, said in a press statement.

The new route will launch on Oct. 24 and take place three times a week on a Boeing 767-300ER  (BA)  plane that is equipped with 46 Polaris business class and 22 Premium Plus seats. The plane choice was a way to reach a luxury customer customer looking to start their holiday in Marrakesh in the plane.

Along with the new Morocco route, United is also launching a flight between Houston (IAH) and Colombia's Medellín on Oct. 27 as well as a route between Tokyo and Cebu in the Philippines on July 31 — the latter is known as a "fifth freedom" flight in which the airline flies to the larger hub from the mainland U.S. and then goes on to smaller Asian city popular with tourists after some travelers get off (and others get on) in Tokyo.

United's network expansion includes new 'fifth freedom' flight

In the fall of 2023, United became the first U.S. airline to fly to the Philippines with a new Manila-San Francisco flight. It has expanded its service to Asia from different U.S. cities earlier last year. Cebu has been on its radar amid growing tourist interest in the region known for marine parks, rainforests and Spanish-style architecture.

With the summer coming up, United also announced that it plans to run its current flights to Hong Kong, Seoul, and Portugal's Porto more frequently at different points of the week and reach four weekly flights between Los Angeles and Shanghai by August 29.

"This is your normal, exciting network planning team back in action," Quayle told travel website The Points Guy of the airline's plans for the new routes.

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