When you mail a letter, how does the government verify that what you’ve pasted in the upper-right corner is actually an official USPS postage stamp? There are so many stamp designs, and none of them appear to have any kind of anti-counterfeiting component - no microprinting, foil strips, or any of that.
What’s to stop me from just printing some random artwork onto adhesive-backed labels, and using some kind of tool/press/whatever to produce that sawtooth pattern on the edges?
I don’t know but I always put a stamp on the envelope. I figure that if they can develop handwriting recognition software that works pretty well, they can develop software that can recognize a legitimate stamp.
The facer/canceler is looking for invisible optical signatures - namely, special inks used in printing stamps or postmarks. I’m not going to say whether or not they’re infrared, ultraviolet or a mix of the two.
If you can fake the invisible optical characteristics for less than 39¢ worth of effort, your letter will probably go through un-noticed, assuming your effort actually looks like a stamp and the carrier who delivers the letter to the recipient’s mailbox doesn’t notice anything funny. Of course, making counterfeit stamps would be postal fraud, a tidy little Federal crime that would put you in a whole new world of hurt, and on a first-name basis with the Secret Service.
" During the printing process the stamps are tagged with a fluorescent ink on all four edges. Tagging permits stamps affiÌ to envelopes to be detected by machine and is also an antifraud tactic for corporate revenue protection"
Ten years or so of sorting mail out to delivery customers make the average postal carrier an absolute wizard at noticing bad stamps, overweight envelopes, and other such things. He won’t always get every one, but over enough repetitions to actually pay for a single printing run, you are gonna get nailed.
After that, the postal inspectors are on to you, and they are just annoyingly relentless.
Yes, they would. A few years back someone “donated” to our organisation several hundred pounds’ worth of forged stamps which he bought on the street for a pittance. He insisted they were safe to use because he’d been using them for months without getting caught. :rolleyes:
The printouts from the USPS.com website have barcodes and label numbers that probably will send up a red flag since the USPS expects to have the address info on file from when the label was created.
Go try to find a red ink printer cartridge that isn’t specifically made for a postage meter. I dare ya. Plain red ink is simply not used in normal inkjet printers as it’s not part of the 4-color printing process (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) so you won’t find red ink cartridges. The red ink that is available is also murderously expensive. We used to have a personal postage meter a few years ago, but got rid of it when we realized that the $40 cartridges from Pitney Bowes were only good for three or four months, whether or not we used the thing.
And collectors aren’t handling thousands of pieces of mail with stamps. They have the time to really study an item that they are considering buying and the knowledge to make that study worthwhile.
Actually, red and green are more and more becoming common in photo inkjet printers; the Canon cartidges linked to above are available at just about any Staples or other office supply store.
The stamps you print have a bar code serial number that is read at the post office. The post office sends the serial to stamps.com, which transfers the postage to the post office, looks up which account it sent that number, and reduces your account balance for the amount.
If you copied the stamps I suspect it would bill multiple times for each stamp serial number it saw (rather than reject it) and your stamps.com balance would decrease accordingly.
Never mind being able to tell real stamps from fake ones - how do they verify the amounts? Those special inks used in different concentrations? Automatic flagging of anything that isn’t standard first-class postage for manual checking? Random auditing as deterrent but no real checking?
When they changed the price of stamps from 37 cents to 39 cents, would they have noticed if I didn’t bother affixing the additional 2 cent stamp to my envelopes until I ran out of the old ones?