Jeff Needleman provides the following information regarding this:
Use a Scanner, Go to Jail by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
TidBITS
Magazine
Hewlett-Packard included a bulletin in a recent mailing to dealers
warning them
that, when demonstrating the capabilities of HP scanners, they must
avoid
scanning money and other sensitive documents. Anyone who does scan
such
documents risks Constructive Seizure of their computer equipment, up to
$25,000 in fines, or up to fifteen years imprisonment. Apparently HP
has
learned of an incident where U.S. Treasury agents seized an HP ScanJet
IIc
scanner, HP DeskJet 500C printer, and an HP Vectra personal computer.
The dealer
and HP sales representative involved spent a considerable amount of
time
retrieving the equipment. HP provides this list of guidelines from the
U.S.
government.
Unacceptable scanning:
*Money *Federal Reserve notes * U.S. postage stamps * Foreign
postage stamps * Revenue stamps * Other negotiable valuated articles
(for
example, checks, bonds,and securities) * dentification documents (for
example, drivers license and governmental identification documents
Acceptable scanning:
*Photographs of people, places, or things * Pictures from magazines,
newsletters, and calendars * Other similar non-sensitive documents
We wish to add that, if you do scan photographs (or even text) from
copyrighted
publications, its important to secure permission before using that
material in
any way. Perhaps the government is concerned that computer input and
output
devices are becoming powerful enough that counterfeiting is (or will
soon be) a
real concern. Weve seen the latest output technology, though, and were
skeptical that counterfeiting with multi-million-dollar technology would
be
cost-effective! Of course, until output quality catches up with the
governments
concerns, well be unable to avoid the image of a crook lugging along a
24-bit
color 1152 x 870 monitor, trying to convince someone that the scanned
image on
it is legal tender!
Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
publications
may reprint articles if full credit is given.
Until recently, I was quite sure that scanning fell under the usual laws
restricting reproduction of U. S. and foreign security obligations. The
old laws
were liberalized back in 1958 and again in 1968 to allow reproduction in
some
cases. The primary exceptions to the usual prohibitions are given in
Title 18,
U. S. Code, Section 504: Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
chapter,
the following are permitted:
[A-C provisions deal with postage/revenue/other securities of the U. S.]
and (D) postage stamps, revenue stamps, notes, bonds, and any other
obligation
or other security of any foreign government, bank or corporation, for
philatelic, numismatic, educational, historical, or newsworthy purposes
in
articles, books, journals, newspapers, or albums (but not for
advertising
purposes, except illustrations of stamps, and paper money in philatelic
or
numismatic articles, books, journals, newspapers, or albums). The
section goes
on to spell out how the printed illustrations must appear. All have to
be in
black and white, except that postage stamps can be illustrated in
color; all
must be of a size less than 75% or more than 150% in linear dimension of
each
item illustrated (except that US stamps can be exact size if illustrated
in
b&w). The negatives and plates used have to be destroyed after their
final
use.
Theres another section regarding film, microfilm or slides for
projection upon
a screen of such items; theyre allowed completely except for advertising
purposes (philatelic advertising is allowed), but you cant make prints
or other
reproductions from such films or slides except by permission of the
Secretary
of the Treasury.
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