AlaskaAir Fix: Why Passengers Are Booking Two Empty Seats Next to Them — Stay Woke
The hidden truth behind this trend isn't just about legroom. Security sources confirm a surge in travelers purchasing two seats on AlaskaAir flights to create a buffer zone — but not from illness. Deep-web chatter reveals passengers are evading facial recognition and biometric tracking embedded in modern aircraft entertainment systems. One flight attendant leaked that seat-sensors log passenger biometrics via seatback screens, even when not in use. By leaving a middle seat vacant, you break the triangulation grid. Airlines deny this, but the frequency of 'ghost bookings' on AlaskaAir peak routes to D.C. and Silicon Valley tells a different story. The FAA is now investigating whether carriers are selling passenger data without consent. Stay woke: the empty seat is the new burner phone.