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Bin laden on British Airways

It just seems like a bad time for any firm with the word "British" in its title. We know all too well the various setbacks experienced by the oil giant once known as British Petroleum; now British Airways has drawn much unwelcome attention to itself with a photo touting its new mobile-boarding pass system as it appears to expedite the air travel of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, the world's most wanted man.


The photo appeared in the LHR News, the company's internal staff magazine covering London's Heathrow Airport. The image accompanied an article spelling out the benefits of the mobile-boarding setup, which permits users of mobile digital devices to print out their boarding passes on the fly. The boarding pass reads "Bin Laden/Osama" and appears in the graphic panel of a user's iPhone. (AT&T reception in remote Pakistani caves is apparently better than anyone might have guessed.)

What's more, the image features a frequent-flier number for passenger bin Laden — so much for all those airport terrorist watch lists — and has him flying first class on Oct. 26, 2010. As the travel site Gadling.com mused, "sadly, knowing the brilliant minds behind the anti-terror organizations, the terror level will be raised to 'red hot' on October 26, 2010, while airport police all over the world try to figure out which airport the most wanted terrorist in the world will be flying to."

So how did this happen? The short answer is that no one knows — or at least, no one's telling if they do. A British Airways spokeswoman told ABC News reporter Scott Mayerowitz that "a mistake has been made in this internal publication and we are working to find out how this occurred." And in response to a follow-up call from Yahoo! News, another spokeswoman for the airline remained firmly on message, saying, "We're still working to find out how this occurred at this time."

The gaffe could be the result of a tasteless prank that got out of hand — but current speculation is running toward the theory that it's the handiwork of a disgruntled employee. British Airways is currently locked in a labor dispute with the union representing its cabin-crew workers, and the strike has grounded flights for thousands of travelers in one of the busiest travel times of the year. At issue in the labor fight is a proposed cut in the base salaries for new flight attendants. The company estimates that it has lost more than $150 million in revenue during the dispute.

Between the union woes and the Osama PR setback, British Airways executives must be fondly reminiscing about last summer, when the major controversy was the airline's plan to sell ad space on its online boarding passes.

—Brett Michael Dykes is a national affairs writer for Yahoo! News.

Be Prepared to Have Your Tweets Become Public Record

Be Prepared to Have Your Tweets Become Public Record

Published on May 13, 2010
Written by Public Record Finder Staff

When Twitter first exploded onto the tech scene, most predicted the
website to be a passing fad. Now that tweeting has become a part of the
English lexicon and is being used by everyone from Barack Obama to
Charles de Gaulle Airport, the Library of Congress plans to create a
public record archive of every tweet since March 2006. Though private
accounts and direct messages will not be a part of the archive, a
majority of the 50 million tweets sent daily are public.

While Twitter is the first social media site to be fully archived in the
Library of Congress, it is not the first or only form of electronic
communication to be stored. Everything from e-mails to text messages is
stored in some capacity. In recent high profile court cases, text
messages have become pertinent in establishing alibis and character
references, while emails are regularly used as evidence involving
government officials. Who knows if Twitter accounts will be the next
form of communication to enter a court room?

By preserving the 140 character messages to be freely searched by the
general public, the Library of Congress is taking a unique step in
recording history. While the value of what a high school student in Iowa
has said about the latest episode of How I Met Your Mother may not be as
important as the first tweet by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, it will
provide future generations with a unique perspective about present day
culture and trends.

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