Laser Printed Pages Now Can Track You 'Like A License Plate'

M

MrPepper11

PC World / Mon Nov 22, 2004
Government Uses Color Laser Printer Technology to Track Documents
Jason Tuohey, Medill News Service

WASHINGTON--Next time you make a printout from your color laser
printer, shine an LED flashlight beam on it and examine it closely
with a magnifying glass. You might be able to see the small, scattered
yellow dots printer there that could be used to trace the document
back to you.

According to experts, several printer companies quietly encode the
serial number and the manufacturing code of their color laser printers
and color copiers on every document those machines produce.
Governments, including the United States, already use the hidden
markings to track counterfeiters.

Peter Crean, a senior research fellow at Xerox, says his company's
laser printers, copiers and multifunction workstations, such as its
WorkCentre Pro series, put the "serial number of each machine coded in
little yellow dots" in every printout. The millimeter-sized dots
appear about every inch on a page, nestled within the printed words
and margins.

"It's a trail back to you, like a license plate," Crean says.

The dots' minuscule size, covering less than one-thousandth of the
page, along with their color combination of yellow on white, makes
them invisible to the naked eye, Crean says. One way to determine if
your color laser is applying this tracking process is to shine a blue
LED light--say, from a keychain laser flashlight--on your page and use
a magnifier.

Crime Fighting vs. Privacy

Laser-printing technology makes it incredibly easy to counterfeit
money and documents, and Crean says the dots, in use in some printers
for decades, allow law enforcement to identify and track down
counterfeiters.

However, they could also be employed to track a document back to any
person or business that printed it. Although the technology has
existed for a long time, printer companies have not been required to
notify customers of the feature.

Lorelei Pagano, a counterfeiting specialist with the U.S. Secret
Service, stresses that the government uses the embedded serial numbers
only when alerted to a forgery. "The only time any information is
gained from these documents is purely in [the case of] a criminal
act," she says.

John Morris, a lawyer for The Center for Democracy and Technology,
says, "That type of assurance doesn't really assure me at all, unless
there's some type of statute." He adds, "At a bare minimum, there
needs to be a notice to consumers."

If the practice disturbs you, don't bother trying to disable the
encoding mechanism--you'll probably just break your printer.

Crean describes the device as a chip located "way in the machine,
right near the laser" that embeds the dots when the document "is about
20 billionths of a second" from printing.

"Standard mischief won't get you around it," Crean adds.

Neither Crean nor Pagano has an estimate of how many laser printers,
copiers, and multifunction devices track documents, but they say that
the practice is commonplace among major printer companies.

"The industry absolutely has been extraordinarily helpful [to law
enforcement]," Pagano says.

According to Pagano, counterfeiting cases are brought to the Secret
Service, which checks the documents, determines the brand and serial
number of the printer, and contacts the company. Some, like Xerox,
have a customer database, and they share the information with the
government.

Crean says Xerox and the government have a good relationship. "The
U.S. government had been on board all along--they would actually come
out to our labs," Crean says.

History

Unlike ink jet printers, laser printers, fax machines, and copiers
fire a laser through a mirror and series of lenses to embed the
document or image on a page. Such devices range from a little over
$100 to more than $1000, and are designed for both home and office.

Crean says Xerox pioneered this technology about 20 years ago, to
assuage fears that their color copiers could easily be used to
counterfeit bills.

"We developed the first (encoding mechanism) in house because several
countries had expressed concern about allowing us to sell the printers
in their country," Crean says.

Since then, he says, many other companies have adopted the practice.

The United States is not the only country teaming with private
industry to fight counterfeiters. A recent article points to the Dutch
government as using similar anticounterfeiting methods, and cites
Canon as a company with encoding technology. Canon USA declined to
comment.
 
D

Derek Lyons

However, they could also be employed to track a document back to any
person or business that printed it.

<adds note to Master Criminal File: Do not register printer when
purchased, or purchase used printer under false name via eBay, or
puchase printer with cash from a small computer store at least 300
kilometers from the Lair.>

D.
 
D

DC

Derek Lyons said:
<adds note to Master Criminal File: Do not register printer when
purchased, or purchase used printer under false name via eBay, or
puchase printer with cash from a small computer store at least 300
kilometers from the Lair.>

also don't pay with a credit card, as that would allow them to track you
down.

I'm surprised that the printer companies don't disclose that they do this in
the user manual.
 
N

Nick Spalding

DC wrote said:
also don't pay with a credit card, as that would allow them to track you
down.

I'm surprised that the printer companies don't disclose that they do this in
the user manual.

Or advertise it as a feature to prevent others attempting to pass off
documents claiming to come from you.
 
F

FutureChild

MrPepper11 said:
PC World / Mon Nov 22, 2004
Government Uses Color Laser Printer Technology to Track Documents
Jason Tuohey, Medill News Service

WASHINGTON--Next time you make a printout from your color laser
printer, shine an LED flashlight beam on it and examine it closely
with a magnifying glass. You might be able to see the small, scattered
yellow dots printer there that could be used to trace the document
back to you.


They are doing this for quite a while now (at least 3 years that I know of).
I realy don't think it helps one bit with the "real" counterfitters.
I know the qms/ konika-minolta printers have this dot overlay embedded in
the engine serial/counter eeprom and i'm quite sure other manufacturers use
the same method.
I also know you can rewrite this eeprom (if you know how to correct the
checksums etc.).
So how to trace a phony bill with a unregistered dot overlay to a serial
number.


Jeff
 
B

bearclaw

FutureChild said:
So how to trace a phony bill with a unregistered dot overlay to a serial
number.

Within law enforcement, it's probably viewed more as prosecutorial
forensic evidence than as a "tracking" tool (unless the counterfeiter is
one of those really dumb ones).
 
F

FutureChild

Within law enforcement, it's probably viewed more as prosecutorial
forensic evidence than as a "tracking" tool (unless the counterfeiter is
one of those really dumb ones).

It has everything to do with today's machinery getting better and better.
without obstacles in programs like photoshop and overlay's in printers we'd
all be printing phony bills in our basement
It is indeed made for joe public counterfeitting in his basement
office...... the smarter ones actualy use more sophisticated machinery than
a laserprinter.
or so I can imagine......;-)
 
B

Bill

FutureChild said:
It has everything to do with today's machinery getting better and better.
without obstacles in programs like photoshop and overlay's in printers we'd
all be printing phony bills in our basement

I don't think so...

Patches for programs like Photoshop are readily available on the net to
edit scanned images of money. And I've yet to come across a typical
printer that will refuse to print a bill.

I could scan a $20 bill and print out a reasonably good copy in a
heartbeat. But very few people would accept it at any store...it just
wouldn't have the right feel to it.
It is indeed made for joe public counterfeitting in his basement
office...... the smarter ones actualy use more sophisticated machinery than
a laserprinter.

Using a laser printer and regular paper is what the dumb criminals do,
and they get caught the same day they try to pass it off.

No one who is really into counterfeiting uses Photoshop, a home computer
or printer, or anything like them. You need the proper equipment to do
even a reasonably good job, so your average joe wouldn't even bother
trying...unless he's a DUMB average joe.
:)
 
T

technomaNge

MrPepper11 said:
PC World / Mon Nov 22, 2004
Government Uses Color Laser Printer Technology to Track Documents
Jason Tuohey, Medill News Service

So, how does this help nail the asshats at CBS with the forged
documents from just before the election?

technomaNge
 
G

Gerald Clough

Within law enforcement, it's probably viewed more as prosecutorial
forensic evidence than as a "tracking" tool (unless the counterfeiter is
one of those really dumb ones).

It's not something that can be casually decoded. In the US, the US
Secret Service is, by aggreement with the manufacturers, the only agency
that holds the codes. Only one agency per country.
 
D

Dan Lanciani

| (e-mail address removed) wrote:
|
| > In article <[email protected]>,
| > "FutureChild" <future|dot|child|at|wanadoo|dot|nl> wrote:
| >
| >
| >>So how to trace a phony bill with a unregistered dot overlay to a serial
| >>number.
| >
| >
| > Within law enforcement, it's probably viewed more as prosecutorial
| > forensic evidence than as a "tracking" tool (unless the counterfeiter is
| > one of those really dumb ones).
|
| It's not something that can be casually decoded. In the US, the US
| Secret Service is, by aggreement with the manufacturers, the only agency
| that holds the codes. Only one agency per country.

But do you need to decode it if you merely want to show that two samples
came from the same printer? That is, is the pattern used by a given printer
constant for all pages that it prints or does each page include a time-varying
confounder of some sort?

Dan Lanciani
ddl@danlan.*com
 
H

Hugh Gibbons

<adds note to Master Criminal File: Do not register printer when
purchased, or purchase used printer under false name via eBay, or
puchase printer with cash from a small computer store at least 300
kilometers from the Lair.>

Better yet, learn how to hack the printer so that it prints no serial
number, or an altered serial number.

Has this claim been validated from a reliable source, or are we
relying on lore?
 
H

Hugh Gibbons

DC said:
also don't pay with a credit card, as that would allow them to track you
down.

I'm surprised that the printer companies don't disclose that they do this in
the user manual.

Hey, if you were a Master Criminal, would you BUY the printer?
 
B

bearclaw

Gerald Clough said:
It's not something that can be casually decoded. In the US, the US
Secret Service is, by aggreement with the manufacturers, the only agency
that holds the codes. Only one agency per country.

Still, there's no court order involved, right? So if another agency
needed the info to nail a suspect on whatever charge, they could easily
ask the Secret Service to run it down for them.
 
A

Alan

technomaNge said:
So, how does this help nail the asshats at CBS with the forged
documents from just before the election?

Since CBS had nth-generation degraded photocopies of faxes of whatever, it doesn't.
 
P

pete

Hey, if you were a Master Criminal, would you BUY the printer?

Any petty criminal would break into some office and steal the printer and a few
other things; the master criminal would hijack a truckload of printers.
 
G

Gerald Clough

Dan said:
| (e-mail address removed) wrote:
|
| > In article <[email protected]>,
| > "FutureChild" <future|dot|child|at|wanadoo|dot|nl> wrote:
| >
| >
| >>So how to trace a phony bill with a unregistered dot overlay to a serial
| >>number.
| >
| >
| > Within law enforcement, it's probably viewed more as prosecutorial
| > forensic evidence than as a "tracking" tool (unless the counterfeiter is
| > one of those really dumb ones).
|
| It's not something that can be casually decoded. In the US, the US
| Secret Service is, by aggreement with the manufacturers, the only agency
| that holds the codes. Only one agency per country.

But do you need to decode it if you merely want to show that two samples
came from the same printer? That is, is the pattern used by a given printer
constant for all pages that it prints or does each page include a time-varying
confounder of some sort?

I suppose you could. My understanding, from the USSS forensics guy, is
that it codes the make and serial number (model too, I guess) in a
pattern of yellow dots.
 
C

Crashj

PC World / Mon Nov 22, 2004
Government Uses Color Laser Printer Technology to Track Documents
Jason Tuohey, Medill News Service

WASHINGTON--Next time you make a printout from your color laser
printer, shine an LED flashlight beam on it and examine it closely
with a magnifying glass. You might be able to see the small, scattered
yellow dots printer there that could be used to trace the document
back to you.
<>
Mygawd, all my big bills must be counterfeit, because they have those
same seemingly random paterns of yellow marks all over the back!
Should I tell the Secret Service?
"twentys and fiftys and hundreds, oh my"
 
P

pete

Mygawd, all my big bills must be counterfeit, because they have those
same seemingly random paterns of yellow marks all over the back!
Should I tell the Secret Service?
"twentys and fiftys and hundreds, oh my"

Burn the lot, NOW!
 

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