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Copy machine security risk! More news about the lack of privacy/security in the ditital age...I had no idea!
Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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babynoz said: More news about the lack of privacy/security in the ditital age...I had no idea!
Damn.... I had no idea either... | |
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And they ship them all over the world? "Let love be your perfect weapon..." ~~Andy Biersack | |
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that's a lot of photocopied bottoms! | |
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wonder if these ones also have a hard drive inside? | |
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Yeah, I knew about this. Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. ~Berthold Auerbach | |
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I had no idea either. Why are hard drives being installed on copy machines? | |
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Wow, no more making copies at Staples or Kinko's, lol. | |
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a psychotic is someone who just figured out what's going on | |
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crazydoctor said: I had no idea either. Why are hard drives being installed on copy machines?
That is the million dollar question. Printers are also coded... http://www.eff.org/wp/inv...r-printers If there are legitimate reasons for the privacy intrusions, then why are manufacturers not required to give proper notice to consumers??? Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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I knew about this.
It's much faster to scan and reproduce from a saved file. It is saved on there in case of a paper loading error (still a major problem on copy machines), it can quickly reproduce what was scanned previous. It makes sense from a design standpoint, but unfortunately it's not as accessible to wipe clean as a computer hard drive, which I believe everyone is wary of leaving data on once they are done using the computer. | |
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Cinnie said: I knew about this.
It's much faster to scan and reproduce from a saved file. It is saved on there in case of a paper loading error (still a major problem on copy machines), it can quickly reproduce what was scanned previous. It makes sense from a design standpoint, but unfortunately it's not as accessible to wipe clean as a computer hard drive, which I believe everyone is wary of leaving data on once they are done using the computer. But why save more than 1 page? Couldn't they use some temporary memory storage, flash memory... just save the last page that was scanned... Scan a new page and the memory is replaced with the newly scanned page... | |
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crazydoctor said: Cinnie said: I knew about this.
It's much faster to scan and reproduce from a saved file. It is saved on there in case of a paper loading error (still a major problem on copy machines), it can quickly reproduce what was scanned previous. It makes sense from a design standpoint, but unfortunately it's not as accessible to wipe clean as a computer hard drive, which I believe everyone is wary of leaving data on once they are done using the computer. But why save more than 1 page? Couldn't they use some temporary memory storage, flash memory... just save the last page that was scanned... Scan a new page and the memory is replaced with the newly scanned page... I am guessing a hard drive is both more reliable to the user, and easily serviceable (not by the consumer) | |
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they also print on the copy info about when it was printed and on what machine, you can see the little micro dots. "Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!" | |
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