The Registered Traveler programs are interoperable; someone who is registered with one RT program can participate in programs operated by other providers.
Clear Clear, operated by Verified Identity Pass, was the largest registered traveler program participant with almost 200,000 members. Established by
Court TV founder
Steven Brill and current Aware CEO Ajay Amlani, it had programs at airports in Albany, Cincinnati, Denver, Washington, D.C. (Dulles and Reagan), Indianapolis, Little Rock, New York (LaGuardia and JFK), Newark, Oakland, Orlando, Salt Lake City, San Jose, San Francisco, and
Westchester County. On July 26, 2008, a laptop containing the names, addresses, birth dates,
driver's license numbers, and passport information of 33,000 Clear customers was reported stolen from a secure room at
San Francisco International Airport. The information was on an unencrypted laptop (in contravention of TSA rules), although it had by two levels of password protection. TSA officials ordered Clear to inform affected customers, suspend enrollment of new customers, cease the use of unencrypted computers, and secure devices until encryption could be installed as required by TSA rules. Verified Identity Pass had to submit an independent audit of its systems to the TSA before the company could register new customers. Verified Identity Pass was purchased by Alclear on May 3, 2010. Alclear brought Clear back and honored the time left on Clear's original customers whose membership may have been terminated before the end of their contracts. In November 2010, Clear re-opened at the Denver and Orlando airports. In February 2018, Clear was operational in nineteen cities.
iQueue FLO Corporation has partnered with Cogent and iQueue to deliver RT solutions and services. They expected to bring back the Registered Traveler program in the "Fall of 2010," starting with Indianapolis International Airport, with further expansions planned after. The website still exists (flyiqueue.com), but the registered traveler enrollment is not as yet operational.
FLO The FLO Corporation, in conjunction with FLO Alliance partners, provides
biometric identification technologies and credentialing processes for use in airports in accordance with the Registered Traveler program. Final enrollment centers are located in the
Washington, D.C. area, or by on-location appointment for corporate accounts.
RtGo RtGo was operated by
Unisys Corporation (it had been bought out by FLO and was being operated by IRAM Associates). Membership was
$100 per year, with the option to prepay for up to 5 years. Shortly after the buyout, the company went out of business and was shut down in July 2009.
Preferred Traveler The Preferred Traveler program is run by Vigilant Solutions, a
Jacksonville Beach-based company. The company's program differentiates itself by adding a suite of value-added services for the traveler. ==Identifying information==