User Panel
Posted: 6/6/2017 8:51:50 PM EDT
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That's kinda cool. unfortunately that cat is out of the bag now. many wont read it or pay attention to it though.
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So the penalty ought to be double, for being a dumb-ass dipshit. Kind of like double the penalty for conspiracy.
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They made them put that stuff in printers when it became easy to print money accurately.
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How is this a secret feature I've know about it for over a decade.
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they have been doing this since laser color printers/copiers came out.
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So if I print anything that is restricted, I should make a photocopy and throw the original away.
10-4 |
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http://www.snopes.com/household-printers-leave-invisible-tracking-code-printed-documents/
Snopes has a reasonably good article on it too. |
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Not exactly a secret, I read about this years ago. You can see the dots with a magnifying glass if you illuminate a page with blue light.
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Hmm, wonder if there will be a lawsuit against the federal government now.
The Third Amendment seems to have no direct constitutional relevance at present; indeed, not only is it the least litigated amendment in the Bill of Rights, but the Supreme Court has never decided a case on the basis of it.
The federal government today is not likely to ask people to house soldiers in their homes, even in time of war. Nevertheless, the amendment has some modern implications. It suggests the individual’s right of domestic privacy—that people are protected from governmental intrusion into their homes; and it is the only part of the Constitution that deals directly with the relationship between the rights of individuals and the military in both peace and war—rights that emphasize the importance of civilian control over the armed forces. Some legal scholars have even begun to argue that the amendment might be applied to the government’s response to terror attacks and natural disasters, and to issues involving eminent domain and the militarization of the police. View Quote |
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"Winner had been in touch with The Intercept by email through her work computer."
Did they really need the dots on the printer? Plus Ms. Winner used her work computer to communicate with an expose news outlet. How ironic -Winner using her work computer. |
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Quoted:
"Winner had been in touch with The Intercept by email through her work computer." Did they really need the dots on the printer? Plus Ms. Winner used her work computer to communicate with an expose news outlet. How ironic -Winner using her work computer. View Quote |
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When will the media be held accountable for accepting known classified info?
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Take a new $20 and try to photocopy it on a new printer. That constellation of "$20" printed in yellow tells the printer to fail to make an accurate copy. View Quote |
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Odds are the technology is in that one as well. This was part of how they tracked down the Citizens' Commission to Investigate the FBI back in 1971 View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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That's what I thought, but when just telling a friend about this like a month ago he didn't believe me that the printer could tell the difference so we ran to his printer and it made a reasonably good looking $20 bill.. I was shocked cause it was a new printer and when I tried this on my printer many many years ago it gave the error not to print. Hmmm View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Take a new $20 and try to photocopy it on a new printer. That constellation of "$20" printed in yellow tells the printer to fail to make an accurate copy. |
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That's just one of any number of ways to track someone who printed a document.
She fucked herself completely. If you're going to try and smuggle secrets, you should probably have some understanding of how technology works. She could have gotten away with this in any number of ways. This is a recurring theme with the libtards. Hillary's servers and the DNC got hacked because apparently nobody in her circle of power had any fucking idea how computers work. |
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Winner had been in touch with The Intercept by email through her work computer. View Quote |
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Just checked on a home printer and industrial type office printer. Both made a decent copy. I guess they changed that "feature" View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Take a new $20 and try to photocopy it on a new printer. That constellation of "$20" printed in yellow tells the printer to fail to make an accurate copy. ETA: Your poor dog. |
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Steps for success:
Purchase throw-away digital camera with cash from a store. Smuggle in. Pull up document on computer. Take pictures of document. Use public computer in a library or something to access a throwaway email account through a public proxy server. Scrub EXIF data from pictures, send to reporter. Destroy camera. Destroy memory card. |
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It's so fucking secret that it's been well known for almost a decade.
https://www.eff.org/pages/list-printers-which-do-or-do-not-display-tracking-dots |
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Quoted:
"Winner had been in touch with The Intercept by email through her work computer." Did they really need the dots on the printer? Plus Ms. Winner used her work computer to communicate with an expose news outlet. How ironic -Winner using her work computer. View Quote |
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View Quote |
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Y'all do realize that every currency bill you have in your pocket has an 'all seeing eye' on it that has a microchip that relays everything it sees to the NSA...don't ya?
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