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Anybody seen/heard of this?

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Old 09 July 2003, 01:44 PM
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PG
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think this is what you are on about???
Old 09 July 2003, 01:50 PM
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3times
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Thanks PG, don't recall that thread.

Oh well, been done before, pretend I never posted.
Old 07 September 2003, 01:38 PM
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3times
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Had this e-mailed to me about a reflective spray that you spray onto your number plates. Been on the Speed Trap website, nothing on there.

Comes from some Americam local rag.

'Photo Blocker' foils traffic cameras

Spray makes license plates reflective

By Greg Avery, Camera Staff Writer
June 30, 2003

Hate the idea of impersonal Boulder cameras ticketing you for running a red light or driving 36 mph in a 25 mph zone? The antidote might be in a red aerosol can.

A Harrisburg, Pa., company sells a spray to stop camera-generated tickets by making your license plates so reflective it blinds the spying cameras when their flash goes off.

Tests show that "Photo Blocker," a product sold over the Internet by Phantom Plate, can help drivers beat traffic-enforcement camera tickets by coating their license plates with a spray.

Phantom Plate started selling the product three years ago. The company was born primarily out of anger over the growing number of places on the East Coast that were using cameras to enforce traffic laws.

"We had a lot of family members and friends who were getting tickets right and left," said Joe Scott, marketing director for Phantom Plate.

Knowing that a mirror reflecting a camera flash ruins a photograph, Phantom Plate founders experimented with ways to make license plates hyper-reflective, Scott said. After much testing, they struck upon the spray.

Since then, the company has sold thousands of the $29.99 cans that can cover up to six license plates, Scott said.

Other companies make similar products, and, like Phantom Plate, also sell clear-plastic license-plate covers that obscure the numbers when viewed at an angle.

Boulder has a mobile photo radar van and stationary pole-mounted cameras at the intersections of 28th Street and Arapahoe Avenue, 28th and Canyon Boulevard and Valmont Road and 47th Street.

The system issued 18,323 tickets last year.

Unlike some other states, Colorado limits camera enforcement to intersections or to ticketing people driving at least 10 mph over the speed limit in neighborhoods and active school zones.

Capt. John Lamb, a Denver traffic officer, participated in a Denver television station's test of the Phantom Plate product. The test replicated a car driving 30 mph through a 20 mph school zone.

The spray successfully obscured the license plate numbers, and the pictures showed the license plate on the test car to be a glowing white blob, Lamb said.

The spray appears to be legal under Colorado law, Lamb said, but he worries about the implications of its use.

"From a police perspective, I think it's irresponsible for anyone to use a device that would defeat our system so they could essentially speed in residential areas and school zones," Lamb said.

Mike Gardener-Sweeney, who oversees Boulder's traffic-enforcement cameras, said the tell-tale glow of the Photo Blocker spray hasn't turned up in the city's pictures.

ACS, the company that runs and maintains the city's cameras, has assured Sweeney that if such sprays became commonplace, the company could switch to other kinds of flashes to make the spray obsolete.

Sweeney said he doesn't see the spray's allure.

"It just seems like somebody's trying to evade prosecution," he said. "I don't see what that's about."

To the people behind Photo Blocker, the spray represents a small way of fighting back. Scott envisions a day when cameras are everywhere on America's roads and all drivers are treated as criminals to be ticketed when their speedometers creep over the limit.

"I agree with making roads safer, but when it starts costing you money as a regular person, that's different. ... Then it's personal," Scott said.

Contact Greg Avery at (303) 473-1307 or averyg@dailycamera.com.




[Edited by 3times - 7/9/2003 1:48:54 PM]
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