Friday, August 20, 2021

AZ AUDIT SPOILER: FBI shit isn't sticking to the walls, MICRODOTS & Nipple Pinching

The FBI admitted this week there was “scant evidence” the US Capitol “attack” was coordinated.

Republican Leaders Are Missing in Action As Patriots Rot in Jail – Shocking Letter Released from Jan. 6 Political Prisoner 

NO AUDIT IN PA: SUBPOENAS ARE BEING BLOCKED BY PEDO RINOS 

meanwhile: Joe the Nipple Pincher persisted to get another feel. ... &,, Calls a Lid on Public Appearances—Indefinitely

NOTABLE #14406466 

AZ AUDIT SPOILER
CALL TO DIG
RUNBECK
MICRODOTS
BARLOW
EFF 

 
Posted this a few loafs ago…this is important…


GP indicting Pulitzer has a MIKE DROP
This anon calling it now as MICRODOTS

 
anons might recalls when color laser printers first came out there were folks who tried the use them to counterfeit money. These folks were wrapped up pretty fast and everyone wondered how that happened. Come to find out the JOHN P. BARLOW and EFF were the first to "crack the code".


The long and the short is this…EVERY SINGLE SHEET OF PAPER OFF MOST LAST PRINTERS HAS A MICRODOT CODE


This code has the serial number of the printer, and a date/time stamp…LET THAT SINK IN


So the AZ was NOT looking for water makers…they were looking for MICRODOTS


RUNBECK
who codemonkey has mentioned is the ballot printer in AZ.


"In the mid-1980s Xerox pioneered an encoding mechanism for a unique number represented by tiny dots spread over the entire print area. Xerox developed the machine identification code "to assuage fears that their color copiers could be used to counterfeit bills"[4] and received U.S. Patent No 5515451 describing the use of the yellow dots to identify the source of a copied or printed document.[5]


In October 2004, consumers first heard of the hidden feature, when it was used by Dutch authorities to track counterfeiters who had used a Canon color laser printer.[6] In November 2004, PC World reported the machine identification code had been used for decades in some printers, allowing law enforcement to identify and track counterfeiters.[4] The Central Bank Counterfeit Deterrence Group (CBCDG) has denied that it developed the feature.[5]


The decoding process discovered by the EFF.
In 2005, the civil rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) encouraged the public to send in sample printouts and subsequently decoded the pattern.[7] The pattern has been demonstrated on a wide range of printers from different manufacturers and models.[8] The EFF stated in 2015 that the documents that they previously received through the FOIA[9] suggested that all major manufacturers of color laser printers entered a secret agreement with governments to ensure that the output of those printers is forensically traceable.[10]"

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machine_Identification_Code
  • https://www.eff.org/pages/list-printers-which-do-or-do-not-display-tracking-dots
  • https://www.pcworld.com/article/229647/counterfeit_money_on_color_laser_printers.html
  • https://runbeck.net
  • https://www.electioncenter.org/index.html