Wed Jul 18, 2007 4:20PM EDT
See Comments (286)
Did you know that many (in fact, most) color laser printers are spying on you whenever you print a document? Though you may not have heard the news, the discovery was announced in late 2005. Manufacturers embed a pattern of tiny yellow dots on printed pages. The dots are too small to be seen with the naked eye (especially since they're yellow, see the above photo to see what they actually look like), but under a microscope and blue light they're revealed. The dots are placed in a pattern unique to each printer, and since most color laser printers are purchased through well-documented service providers or direct from the manufacturer, it's simple to track any printed page back to the owner of the printer.
The original idea was obviously to help the government track down currency counterfeiters, since any phony money would be tagged with the yellow dots and would be easily trackable back to the source. But there are also signs of abuse, with the FBI reportedly using the technology to keep tabs on who's printing material for groups like the ACLU and Greenpeace. That's a little scary... and important to remember if you've considering printing a whistleblowing tip or any missive you'd prefer to leave anonymous on a color laser.
If the privacy ramifications of this news bother you, there's some good news. Not all printers have the tracking dots, and the EFF has compiled and updated its list of which ones do and which ones don't. Simply check out this page and look up your printer. (Remember, black and white lasers and inkjet printers don't include the dots.) As the document notes, remember that even if a printer doesn't include the dots, that doesn't mean it isn't using some other method to track your printed pages. If your printer isn't listed here, that means that no information is available about whether that printer includes the dots or not.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Mine just gets up in the middle of the night and drinks my beer. Explains why my paper always had that odd smell to it.
Meh printers...dont work for me anyways,always had trouble with them.
Outrageous!
woah. now I know to use my roommates printer when printing naughty things.
everything is monitored : bank accounts, google searches, telephone conversations etc , so this isn't such a big news. anyone could have guessed
Technically it's the right of the manufacturer to do whatever they want with their printers, but like I'm gunna trust the people who brought me FBI wiretapping ordinary citizens and literally tens of thousands of reported abuses of the Patriot Act not to abuse this? I think this has potential to be protected by the 4th Amendment and the government should need a warrant to use the information.
I am about tired of hearing "if you're not doing anything wrong you have nothing to worry about. The right to privacy is supposed to be a right we have in this country. They invented warrants and "probable cause" in the case that you are breaking the law in your private home. Just because a terrorist breaks the law does not mean we should all be subject to the same watchful eye of the govt, for a criminals mistake. This country really needs to stop treating adults like criminals. Funny how the rich break the laws all the time, yet they are subject to a different side of the system. Take Paris Hilton and her special treatment. Even Scooter Libby and his pardon by our President proves this. There was a time long ago when the people stood up to this kind of stuff. The American revolution comes to mind. Just some food for thought.
Cute--Invasion of privacy by beer drinking paper. Sounds like a new twilight zone flick!!
I personally find the practice or should I say technique of making printers have their own signature clever to say the least. We need more accountability in the world.
Yeah, well, I doubt thew ACLU or Greenpeace do anything wrong either, so how come the FBI has to spy on them at the cost of their privacy and our tax dollars?
The one thing you can trust about the American government is that you cannot trust the American government. I wonder how long it'll take them to track this comment back to me, show up at my door and.....-thud- THERES NOTHING TO SEE HERE. MOVE ALONG. MOVE ALONG.
Our U.S. Government Prints Money Like Toilet Paper with No Securities To Back It....Why Can't We???? "In doG We Trust"....
In the Soviet Union, typewriters had to be registered, filed pages typed on each allowed the KGB and other 'security services' to keep track of what it's citizens were writing as well. KGB, FBI, change the flag and rewrite the oath and the cogs are universally interchangeable, with every man-in-black a patriot and every citizen a potential threat.
mine, in the middle of his life decided he wants to be a suicide bomber if you know what i mean
mine, in the middle of his life decided he wants to be a suicide bomber if you know what i mean
i's sees yellow dots and little green men.
BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU... SLEEP WITH YOUR EYES OPEN...
It just shows how boring other people are to have to find other methods to spy on one another.
I beg to differ with post #5. The world is filled with examples of people with power abusing their authority to punish the innocent and to allow the guilty to go unpunished. The idea that "if you're not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to worry about" is a thing of the past. Anyone who has been wrongfully punished for something they didn't do, or anyone who has seen one with money or influence get out of something they did wrong, knows this.
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6 Posted by liddlemisserika on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:50PM EDT Report Abuse
STELLAR!