Government Uses Color Laser Printer Technology to Track Documents
Remember that next time you print out anti-Bush handouts for your next rally.
Government Uses Color Laser Printer Technology to Track Documents
Remember that next time you print out anti-Bush handouts for your next rally.
Gotta love my inkjet. It’s sloppy at times but at least it’s not a snitch.
First person to say “Bush” gets… Oops, too late.
Dang, who can afford color for something like that? It’s, like, 70 cents a page, isn’t it?
My thoughts exactly. Isn’t it usually just a bunch of photocopies?
Goddamnit! Bush is keeping the cost of color copies out of the reach of the masses. Won’t someone think of the children? They need color copies too. Bush hates children. It’s all a plot! Only the rich will have color copies. Argh!!!
Not quite. This $395 Konica color laser printer gets 1500 copies from a $279 4-color toner pack. That’s 18.6¢ per copy, hardly a budget buster.
Well, okey-doke then. The 70-cent figure is about what I’ve been paying to have my subversive literature printed at Kinko’s, as I’ve only needed four or five copies at a time.
Still, one thinks that if Bush’s presumed jackbooted thugs ever really want to bust down my door, they’ll probably have plenty of other ways to identify which door to bust down than encoded color copies.
Like my posts to this board, f’r example.
Hm. And Adobe won’t let you play around with dollar bills in PS. Any truth to that? Supposedly, PS will detect US paper currency and not allow you to make the colors resemble an actual dollar. I’ve never tried that myself.
Well, i thought that someone had been pulling your chain, but apparently the latest version, Photoshop CS, does indeed have the capacity to detect and prevent attempts to scan currency.
Here’s a screenshot of the warning message. And here’s an article about it.
According to this article, though, the Photoshop currency detector is pretty easy to circumvent.
The machine they used at the Kinko’s where I used to work cost about .32 cents each to the store, which is why they charge you 70 as a base price (so there can be volume discounts without dipping below their own cost).
Holy fuck! :eek:
In case anyone is curious, one of the many ways copying machines and software can figure out what is currency and what is not is by detecting a pattern of seemingly-random circles, called the EURion, scattered about the banknote. The green lines linking the “constellations” in the PDF sample are only used as a visual aid and are not actually printed. Sometimes, this pattern is disguised amongst other objects – in the £20 example, it’s in the musical notes.
The newest U.S. banknotes also contain this pattern, embedded as the zeroes in the small 20s and 50s printed on the bills.
Not every central bank has implemented this anti-counterfeiting measure, however, because some currencies are evidently just not valuable enough.