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Printer tracking dots

From Consumer_Action_Taskforce
Revision as of 10:38, 30 January 2025 by HeavenPiercerYama (talk | contribs) (added citation)

Tracking dots, also known as printer steganography or machine identification codes (MICs), are an often-overlooked yet serious privacy concern. These tiny, nearly invisible markings are added by many color laser printers to every page they print.[1] While originally intended as an anti-counterfeiting measure, they have significant implications for privacy, surveillance, and personal freedoms. [2]

Relation to anti-consumer practices

1. Lack of Transparency

One of the most alarming aspects of tracking dots is that they are implemented without the knowledge or consent of users. Manufacturers do not clearly disclose this functionality, leaving individuals unaware that their printed documents contain hidden identifying information.

2. Privacy Violation

These dots encode details such as the printer’s serial number and the exact date and time of printing. This means that documents can be traced back to the specific printer—and potentially the individual—who created them. In an era of increasing digital surveillance, this constitutes a severe breach of privacy.

3. Potential for Abuse

Although originally intended to help law enforcement track counterfeiters, these dots can be exploited for less noble purposes. Authoritarian regimes, corporations, or malicious actors could use them to identify whistleblowers, activists, journalists, or dissidents. Such a system creates risks for those who rely on anonymity for safety.

4. Unregulated and Unaccountable Implementation

There is no public oversight or legal requirement for manufacturers to implement tracking dots, yet they are present in many common printer models. The lack of regulation means users have no recourse to disable this feature.

How Tracking Dots Work[3]

Tracking dots are typically arranged in a barely visible yellow pattern on each printed page. These dots encode:

  • The printer’s serial number
  • The exact time and date of printing
  • Possibly other identifying information

References

See Also

Page specifying which printers partake in this practice

Guide to decode printer dot patterns