So I was mailing off a letter, and I was thinking, "man, there are a billion different stamp designs out there. I could easily take any picture and print it out on a blank sticker and mail it off." Ok, obviously that would be Mail Fraud and therefore a Federal Offence not worth committing, but wondering if the post office really has any way of identifying fake stamps. They don't seem to be encoded with any anti-counterfeit designs.
2007-10-09
08:54:41
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4 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Politics & Government
➔ Law & Ethics
The following answer is incorrect: "In the U.S., postage stamps are protected by the Information Based Indicia (IBI) technology. IBI is an encrypted 2-dimensional bar code that makes counterfeiting more difficult and easier to detect. Each IBI is unique. It is machine-readable." This techonology is only used as another method for printing stamps for consumers "as needed". My question is in reference to a pre-paid stamp where there is clearly now visible bar code on it. Further, IBI technology has only been developed since the 2000s, though older stamps are still valid for use.
2007-10-09
10:04:34 ·
update #1