From: thug@phantom.com (Murdering Thug)
To: rees@cs.bu.edu (David Rees)
Message Hash: d5b1532aae3ed2a5d5a8ac382424937e4580bce4a06e1919c35a3d9495ae25e3
Message ID: <m0ozqoE-0009ICC@mindvox.phantom.com>
Reply To: <9311171257.AA02551@csa.bu.edu>
UTC Datetime: 1993-11-17 17:34:21 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 17 Nov 93 09:34:21 PST
From: thug@phantom.com (Murdering Thug)
Date: Wed, 17 Nov 93 09:34:21 PST
To: rees@cs.bu.edu (David Rees)
Subject: Re: Tech: Truth about Canon Copiers (fwd)
In-Reply-To: <9311171257.AA02551@csa.bu.edu>
Message-ID: <m0ozqoE-0009ICC@mindvox.phantom.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text
> > It copied the side with the dead white guy fine. We flipped it over
> > and copied the other side. It printed a deeply altered image.
> > /hawk
> >
> > --
> > Harry S. Hawk - Extropian
> > habs@extropy.org
>
> This is interesting. Since most of the change-making machines in
> laundromats seem to use the side with the dead white guy, I wonder if it
> would work to use this copy?
> ----Dave REes (rees@cs.bu.edu)
>
Change-making machines also do a test to see if the ink used to print the
money is magnetic (on real money it is magnetic, however copier toner is
not), as well as shine a UV light to see if the paper glows (most
chemically whitened paper glows under UV light, but U.S. currency paper
does not).
If you use non-chemically whitened paper and put MICR (magnetic) toner
into the copier, you can VERY EASILY fool the change machines. Trust me
on this one :)
Thug
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