Why do people block out their license plates in pictures
Why do people block out their license plates in pictures?
I was once told it was done so people couldn't find their cars and steal them. but i fail to see how knowing a person's license plate can help you find their car/living address. unless you work at the dmv or are a cop obviously and can run plates.
I was once told it was done so people couldn't find their cars and steal them. but i fail to see how knowing a person's license plate can help you find their car/living address. unless you work at the dmv or are a cop obviously and can run plates.
it doesn't make much sense to me, as anyone on the road can grab your license plate number and find the same info.
The problem is, public availability of information. With a license plate, you can legally obtain the car's registration through your county clerk. With that information, you can go to the DMV and pay for a copy of their driver's license. Now, you have their address, picture, height, weight, and until recently their SS#.
Want to steal someone's identify? There you go.
The problem is, public availability of information. With a license plate, you can legally obtain the car's registration through your county clerk. With that information, you can go to the DMV and pay for a copy of their driver's license. Now, you have their address, picture, height, weight, and until recently their SS#.
Want to steal someone's identify? There you go.
http://epic.org/privacy/drivers/
The DPPA was passed in reaction to the a series of abuses of drivers' personal information held by government. The 1989 death of actress Rebecca Schaeffer was a prominent example of such abuse. In that case, a private investigator, hired by an obsessed fan, was able to obtain Rebecca Schaeffer's address through her California motor vehicle record. The fan used her address information to stalk and to kill her. Other incidents cited by Congress included a ring of Iowa home robbers who targeted victims by writing down the license plates of expensive cars and obtaining home address information from the State's department of motor vehicles.
Senator Barbara Boxer, who sponsored 103 S. 1589, a version of the DPPA, cited other examples where stalkers were able to find victims by simply visiting a DMV. She argued that in "34 States, someone [could] walk into a State Motor Vehicle Department with your license plate number and a few dollars and walk out with your name and home address." Senator Boxer also said:
"In Tempe, AZ, a woman was murdered by a man who had obtained her home address from that State's DMV.
And, in California, a 31-year-old man copied down the license plate numbers of five women in their early twenties, obtained their home address from the DMV and then sent them threatening letters at home.
Senator Barbara Boxer, who sponsored 103 S. 1589, a version of the DPPA, cited other examples where stalkers were able to find victims by simply visiting a DMV. She argued that in "34 States, someone [could] walk into a State Motor Vehicle Department with your license plate number and a few dollars and walk out with your name and home address." Senator Boxer also said:
"In Tempe, AZ, a woman was murdered by a man who had obtained her home address from that State's DMV.
And, in California, a 31-year-old man copied down the license plate numbers of five women in their early twenties, obtained their home address from the DMV and then sent them threatening letters at home.
Senior Member

Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 3,837
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From: Floating around the AUDM
Vehicle: X3 Sprint, S-Coupe Turbo
Not in Australia. That said, we have 'hoon' laws, basically if your plates get reported for racing/burnouts three times? They confiscate your car. If there is a photo of you doing burnouts/racing somebody, they can confiscate your car. So people block out their plates for 'action' photos unless they are retarded.
However, it would be just as easy to get somebody's personal info from a forum/fb/twitter account as it would be to get it from a licence plate. Blocking them out is just paranoid.
However, it would be just as easy to get somebody's personal info from a forum/fb/twitter account as it would be to get it from a licence plate. Blocking them out is just paranoid.
Junior Member

Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 19
Likes: 0
From: Red deer, Alberta
Vehicle: 2010 Hyundai Genesis
Some people do it to avoid warranty issues.
some dealerships will stalk the forums and find proof of modifications when a claim is put in.
myself....I just work on my car in the shop when I have issues. (I work at a performance company)
Warranty...pfft! who needs that
some dealerships will stalk the forums and find proof of modifications when a claim is put in.
myself....I just work on my car in the shop when I have issues. (I work at a performance company)
Warranty...pfft! who needs that



