Search for: "We Scan IDs"
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4 Mar 2:37 pm
... do-gooder, was being mentioned as a potential candidate for head of the Government Printing Office. Of course, we at Justia cheered this
idea on -- who better to bring government publishing into the digital age ... and government works makes him the perfect candidate for the GPO. We are promised change -- and we need someone like Carl to make that happen. Having someone ... Carl is a great man
who deserves all our support! Peace & Yes We Scan! Tim, Ken, Stacy, Courtney, Cicely, Vasu, Dan,
Nick, Soby ...
17 Apr, 2008 10:05 am
... money to help election administrators who wished to replace paperless voting systems with optically scanned paper ballots (or to add paper-printing attachments to existing
electronic voting systems). ... problem for the apparently non-trivial number of current voters who lack normal ID cards (and, who we
are led to believe, tend to vote in favor of Democrats). The question then ... one in Texas. If you don't have any other form of ID, it's pretty difficult to get your birth
certificate as well. You'll ...
3 Jun, 2008 2:27 am
... : If automatic tabulating equipment detects that more marks were made on an optical scan ballot for a particular office, question, or issue
than the number of selections that a voter is allowed ... security of all Ohio voting systems and clarifying state rules on voter ID. But she's also made some bad decisions,
which have ... voting equipment that's used. What we can do is focus on procedures that will ensure voting system integrity, consistent
implementation of voter ID and provisional voting rules, ...
4 Aug 6:30 am
... Threat Level. "There was a lot of surprise," Priest says. "It really was a 'holy shit,' we didn't think about that [moment]." Law
enforcement and intelligence agents attend ... affiliation, but many attend undercover. Although corporate- and government-issued ID cards embedded with RFID chips don't reveal a
card holder's ... event at DefCon, presented a target-rich environment for anyone who might have wanted to scan government RFID documents for
nefarious purposes. The 22 panelists included top cybercops ...
23 Oct 1:25 pm
... and other federal agencies. "Vulnerable devices can be found in significant numbers in all parts of the world covered by our scan," (.pdf)
the researchers wrote in a summary of their initial findings presented at a symposium in June. "The double digit vulnerability rates ... open," Stolfo said. "We do not access the machine. We break the connection at that point and move on." ISPs can easily detect the
scanning, and the researchers embedded a URL in their probes for a webpage explaining the project ...
21 Mar, 2007 5:59 am
... with multi-function devices. The old copiers were single-purpose only, and requests from users for more scanning capability was common. We knew it made sense to replace those copiers with MFDs, but weren't sure that there was an easy way to leverage the scanning ability in a way that
was both easy on the typical law firm user easy for the IT department to support. We knew we needed
to replace our old cost-recovery system, and we also realized we needed a ...
7 Feb, 2008 11:07 pm
... and more productive," said Roger Ellefson, manager of Solutions Marketing, Xerox Office Group. "With SMARTdocument Travel Express, we've
made scanning and archiving as simple as pressing a couple buttons." With SMARTdocument Travel Express, powered by AutoStore®, all that is needed is an office multifunction
product to scan, index and send important documents to multiple destinations. Touching a few buttons directs the selected document to network
folders, e ...
4 Dec, 2008 4:43 am
... in the national sex offender database. Yvonne Meadows said she objected to Bee Cave Elementary School scanning her license because she was concerned about identify theft and
a private company collecting her personal information. " ... succeed. Without knowing more details of the complaint, it seems hard to think there is a recognized privacy right for
running the ID check against a database. The argument seems especially difficult given that the decision to visit a school is essentially voluntary. ...
7 Jul, 2007 5:39 pm
... praised Montana, and here Maine, for opposing the Real ID Act. Today we celebrate New Hampshire. New Hampshire Gov. John Lynch last
week ... opposite effect. The federal government obviously did not think this burdensome system through and that is why we in New Hampshire are
right to reject it." The ever-evolving Real ... include a digital photograph and a bar code that can be scanned by electronic readers. Such a federally approved ID card or
document would be required for people entering a federal ...
18 Apr, 2007 5:41 pm
... one of the strongest rejections to the federal plan. The move means the state won't comply with the Real ID Act, a federal law that sets a national standard for driver's
licenses and requires states to link their record-keeping systems to national databases. Here's why: "We also don't think that bureaucrats in
Washington, D.C., ought to tell us that if we're going to get on a plane we have to carry their card,
so when it's scanned through they know where you went, when you ...
18 Apr, 2007 5:41 pm
... one of the strongest rejections to the federal plan. The move means the state won't comply with the Real ID Act, a federal law that sets a national standard for driver's
licenses and requires states to link their record-keeping systems to national databases. Here's why: "We also don't think that bureaucrats in
Washington, D.C., ought to tell us that if we're going to get on a plane we have to carry their card,
so when it's scanned through they know where you went, when you ...
21 Mar, 2007 3:02 pm
... his wallet was stolen. First, he says don't sign your credit cards; instead put "Photo ID Required." That means if the card is stolen, the thief can't use it without also
having your picture ID. Second, ... copy machine and copy for reference. However, I recommend holding up on that until we've received
some feedback on my earlier post about photocopiers retaining your scanned personal data. Fifth, file a police report in the jurisdiction where the credit cards were stolen, and
call the three major ...
12 Mar, 2008 11:38 pm
Unnecessary appendectomies have become drastically less common since 1996, thanks to the increased use of CT scanning in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis. The finding was
announced by a research team led by Dr. Steven Raman of the University of ... not be performed unless necessary, the researchers warn. Previously on the DC Metro Area Medical
Malpractice Law Blog, we have posted articles related to: A study demonstrating that technical errors are prevalent in U.S. surgeries A report
indicating ...
26 Apr, 2008 12:51 am
... piece) of identifiable personal financial information, take a minute to scan these helpful tips, designed to help you prevent the headache
and financial injury associated with ID theft: "Canceled checks Canceled checks with no long-term significance for tax or other purposes can ... dental bills • Travel itineraries
• Used airline tickets" Previously on the DC Metro Area Personal Injury Law Blog, we have posted articles related to: Five basic tips for
preventing ID theft A ...
13 Dec, 2008 9:13 am
... It may surprise many legal market professionals that search and keywords is really an old issue. Ari Kaplan, in We're All in the Keyword
Business (law.com, 15 Dec 2008), reports on a recent EDD conference. He writes: ... newbies. Some litigation support professionals grappled with similar issues throughout the 1990s. By
1991, some firms were scanning paper, OCRing, and creating full-text searchable litigation support databases. They had to deal with many of the issues we face today: under- and over- ...
26 Aug 12:42 pm
with 25 IDs nabbed by face-recognition tech | Technically Incorrect - CNET News. We lawyer bloggers
write a lot about security and privacy on the net; actually, more about the death of privacy on the Internet. However, privacy ... . Everytime you get a driver's license, or have a
photo take for an I.D., there is an increasing likelihood that face recognition software is being used to scan your face and compare it to a
database. You can pick your nose in public, but you can't hide. Disclaimer: This ...
3 Dec, 2007 11:42 am
... personal-computer revolution was just beginning. But there are a few things from the old days that we still cherish. 1. More RAM Than You
Can Handle One early ... , kilobytes--should be enough for any computer user. (He vehemently denies saying it.) We joke about it today, but in
1981 that sentiment would have made sense. The phenomenally popular ... computers-but virus protection wasn't as big a concern as it is now. Running virus scans certainly took
less time; since most personal computers lacked hard ...
5 May 3:00 am
... instinct to "Google" our keys when they're missing. But on the web usually what we're trying to find is meaningful real world information
in the form of sensory input ... way we have gotten to real world information over time has changed. A search for the GDP of France a couple
decades ago might have involved scanning ... David Weinberger to discuss what Wolfram Alpha does, and how it may change the way we
search. [LEAD IN TO - INTERVIEW EXCERPTS] Stephen Wolfram is the brains behind Mathematica, A New ...
Listen Now:
30 Jul 12:06 am
... Remote access: students didn't have to physically come to the library. Clear that we now need to restrict access, but unclear to what
degree: limits to university sufficient, ... you do it by class number, or do you have to limit it to individual student IDs? One example:
first-year med students are all required to take the same ... out a purchased digital copy licensed for one hard drive only and scanning it for an attorney's use was
circumvention. (I think she may have meant that it was an infringement ...
28 Apr, 2008 12:24 pm
... County Election Board the Supreme Court has upheld Indiana's voter ID law, in a splintered set of opinions with no majority opinion. I have only scanned the opinions
but it appears that the Stevens opinion (joined by CJ Roberts and Kennedy) applies the balancing test of Anderson v ... one bank account to another without doing so. Isn't voting at
least as precious? UPDATE: Kathleen Bergin beat me to the posting, but as readers can see, we apparently disagree on the case.
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