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Who wants their printer to scan every document they print, and if it sees something the printer manufacturer thinks is illegal it's reported to the police?

Or their TV scans every frame displayed and every word said if it sees anything the TV manufacturer thinks is illegal it's reported to the police?

Or their blender has an array of chemical sensors in it, and if it detects a substance the manufacturer thinks is illegal it's reported to the police?

How about smart floorboards that detect illegal dancing by women in Iran? Shall we do that too?

Apple where are you on that one? I can point you to a country filled with eager customers, seems right up your alley.



> Who wants their printer to scan every document they print, and if it sees something the printer manufacturer thinks is illegal it's reported to the police?

FYI most (all?) modern printers will refuse to print anything they think is counterfeit money, and will include a unique code traceable back to you in every printed document. - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machine_Identification_Code


Printers may do this but it doesn't call the police on them


But let's be honest here: MIC is a truly upsetting privacy violation all on its own.


I'm not a fan of this either but at least it doesn't call the police on me. It places a marker so that a human could track it back to be, sure, but that still requires me to actually try to do something illegal with something I've printed.

I still think it's BS that you can't scan money though and it very much an overreach. Your home printer isn't gonna make a convincing fake anyway.


Well, looks like I'm never buying a new printer.


>Developed by Xerox and Canon in the mid-1980s




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