"John H." wrote in message
...
On Mon, 01 Aug 2005 09:08:34 -0400, HarryKrause
wrote:
Doug Kanter wrote:
"HarryKrause" wrote in message
...
July 30, 2005 12:27 PM PDT
EFF probes printer watermarks
Color laser printers print hidden data that lets law enforcement
agencies
tell which printer was used and when, according to the Electronic
Frontier
Foundation. The EFF on Thursday sent a freedom of information act
request
to the U.S. Secret Service in an attempt to get details on the tracing
feature, which the group says impacts the privacy of users.
Do you think the printer manufacturers designed these things at the
behest
of the government? Or are they just the trails left by a particular
design,
in the same way a not-so-old Chrysler mini-van smells like a 30 year
old
pickup that's never had its oil changed?
Well, I have always heard that "the police" could match up a photocopy
from a Xerox machine or a copy from a Laserprinter to a copy they were
holding as evidence because of manufacturing marks burned into images
through the printing process. I have no idea, however, if that is the
truth.
Frankly, I wouldn't put anything past the Bush Administration when it
comes to the eroding of individual civil liberties. There hasn't been
another POTUS in my lifetime who has done more to erode individual civil
liberties than Bush.
On a slightly related note, if you buy a new handgun in Maryland through
legal channels, a spent round casing must be sent to the state police.
Manufacturers who sell through dealers in Maryland include the spent
casing in the presentation box.
I suppose if a crime is committed with a semi-auto handgun that ejects
casings, a match could be made in a state police lab.
Bush administration?
From your source,
"Katzenbeisser, Stefan, and Fabien A.P. Petitcolas, eds. Information
Hiding
Techniques for Steganography and Digital Watermarking. Boston: Artech
House,
2000."
Do you really think this all started during the Bush Administration?
Looks like somebody has come down with a case of foot in mouth disease.
--
John H.
On the 'PocoLoco' out of Deale, MD
|