So... Would this actually be working?
Unlike plastic lenses and covers, Photoblocker does not alter the appearance of the plate to the naked eye and it is not illegal......not yet, anyway. Nowhere in the law does it state your plates have to be photogenic.
The problem with enforcing any potential law that would ban Photoblocker is proving that the plates have been sprayed. Unless law enforcement plans to ship every plate in question to a laboratory for testing, there's no way for them to know it's there.
Dash mounted squad car cameras will pick up the plate number without a problem. Only the cameras utilizing flash photography will be affected by Photoblocker.
BTW......95% of the red light, tollway, and speed trap cameras used today utilize flash photography.
Ken Wilson
PhotoBlocker-Texas.com
The problem with enforcing any potential law that would ban Photoblocker is proving that the plates have been sprayed. Unless law enforcement plans to ship every plate in question to a laboratory for testing, there's no way for them to know it's there.
Dash mounted squad car cameras will pick up the plate number without a problem. Only the cameras utilizing flash photography will be affected by Photoblocker.
BTW......95% of the red light, tollway, and speed trap cameras used today utilize flash photography.
Ken Wilson
PhotoBlocker-Texas.com
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Frisky
UK & Ireland S2000 Community
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Mar 23, 2003 01:57 AM



