Really, though, modelling clay, while useful, also is not fit for the intended purpose, in a consumers eyes, of what they bought the tablet for. In all regards, scammers suck.
You can thank the ipad scammers for that. (They repacked those with modeling clay), and even hired mules to do the actual returns, on the basis of secret shopper.
Yeah, lots of cheques are commonly printed with a laser printer. If somehow the area to be unprinted could be selectively chosen, then one could modify the "pay to the order of" line, and possibly the amount to pay lines.
Banks are going to have to add something that reacts to the high powered picosecond laser pulses, to show that the check has been tampered with in that manner.
MOD10 check only. You can even use fake numbers like 4242 4242 4242 4242, or 4000 0000 0000 0002. However, if it fails on either the birth date, or the credit card number, a cookie is set, to completely disallowing of a second chance, unless the user knows how to clear the cookie.
Really, though, modelling clay, while useful, also is not fit for the intended purpose, in a consumers eyes, of what they bought the tablet for. In all regards, scammers suck.
You can thank the ipad scammers for that. (They repacked those with modeling clay), and even hired mules to do the actual returns, on the basis of secret shopper.
Yeah, lots of cheques are commonly printed with a laser printer. If somehow the area to be unprinted could be selectively chosen, then one could modify the "pay to the order of" line, and possibly the amount to pay lines. Banks are going to have to add something that reacts to the high powered picosecond laser pulses, to show that the check has been tampered with in that manner.
MOD10 check only. You can even use fake numbers like 4242 4242 4242 4242, or 4000 0000 0000 0002. However, if it fails on either the birth date, or the credit card number, a cookie is set, to completely disallowing of a second chance, unless the user knows how to clear the cookie.