Does anyone know what the airlines do with the info they collect off the ID? Are they just noting whether the names match, or is it more sinister? When I was below legal drinking age (21 in my state) I would drive up to the window (how barbaric! liquor sales to guys in cars!) and give the sub-moronic guy my REAL ID under the assumption that: he expects it to say something that proves I am over age, or else why would I be handing it to him? [nicely enough, this shifts all of the risk of the transaction to him, should it go wrong.] Similarly, if you booked a flight under the name Nevah Umind, when you hand over a piece of ID, they look to see it says Nevah Umind (unless, of course, your name happens to be Nevah Umind) and that's all they want, right? And if we all booked flights under the same name, then wouldn't that throw 'em WAY off? Pick a name, DON'T scan your license in, DON'T edit it, DON'T laminate it, and (for pete's sake!) DON'T use that name. Their querying will tell them, "I have a match, he's okay" (These are not the droids you are looking for, eh!) and away you go! X ~> -----Original Message----- ~> From: owner-cypherpunks@minder.net ~> [mailto:owner-cypherpunks@minder.net]On Behalf Of Joel O'Connor ~> I traveled by train all the way to Florida from Rhode Island once. 24 ~> hours straight it took man and I swore I would never do it again. ~> 40-50 people per car and basically one bathroom per car. Come morning ~> time man, the lines for the bathrooms stretched out of the cars. ~> Screw that, I could have flown and made it in 3 hours. Plus it's ~> easier for the gov't to stop trains and search them, I'd rather go ~> with the flight. ~>