Search found 4 matches

by jimlongley
Wed May 08, 2013 3:25 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: Buying with a CHL
Replies: 71
Views: 11259

Re: Buying with a CHL

sjfcontrol wrote:
RX8er wrote:
jimlongley wrote:
RX8er wrote:
JP171 wrote:
azwe wrote:Refusing to let me copy your ID voids all current and future sales.

well gee umm, good enough for me, keep your merchandise that is over priced and I don't need anyway and I'll spend my money to enrich someone else's life. it is in violation of us government regulations and law to copy some of my ID's and State law for others and my own personal guidelines for my Texas DL issued by DPS as well as my CHL also issued by DPS
What laws make it illegal to copy an ID and state law, a drivers license? And by this I mean not ones specifically calling out for fraudulent purposes.

I know in some normal cases of business, it is done perfectly legal. Go to the doctor and they make a copy of your DL and insurance card. Go to the bank with a large cash deposit and they get a fingerprint and a copy of your DL.
Lately I have been refusing to let the hospital and doctors' offices to make those copies, and they have been pretty compliant. I do point out that they have made copies of the same in the past therefore they do not need new ones. My local hospital "lost" my DL and insurance card a few years back when the copy machine broke down and they took them to a different copy machine and left them there, and I was called in for treatment before they came back. I raised a stink, and even called the police while a hospital administrator offered to write me a note that I could carry in lieu of my DL, and the cop that responded told her that they wouldn't accept the note and I would be arrested for driving without a license. I then insisted that they tear down the hospital brick by brick to find my documents, and the cop just grinned and shrugged.

They can scan my insurance card all they want, but I do not knowingly let them copy my license any more.

When I was being admitted for knee replacement surgery a couple of years ago, the desk person (different hospital from above) asked to "see" my ID and insurance card. I laid both of them on the counter and she immediately started to pick them up. I slammed my hand on top of them and asked her what she thought she was doing, and she stated she was going to make copies. I pointed out that she only had asked to "see" them, not pick them up or copy them and that those documents were my personal property and not to be removed from my possession or sight. After an administrator came out and, eventually, politely asked if they could copy them for security reasons the young lady then started to leave the room with them. She never did make the copies because I would not allow them to take them into the next room where the copier was.

You can refuse.

I am always looking for more reasons to be obstinate and safe. In this day and age with ID theft so bad, any extra measure is a good measuer. I've always just looked at it like they can get it on the internet within a few mouse clicks if they need too and a copy of a drivers license is just about as good as writing all the info down on a piece of paper. I was hoping that there was a law that cleared things up. My regular doctor doesn't make a copy but if I go to the ER, they always do.
It isn't well known, but getting the information off a DL using a mag-stripe reader (or bar code reader, or (maybe?) optical scanner) is a class A Misdemeanor in Texas, with a few exceptions. One of the exceptions is hospitals -- although it is specified that if the license holder objects, the hospital must use alternate means. I would guess a simple photocopy would not be considered "...accesses or uses electronically readable information derived from a driver's license...". Interested parties can look up Traffic Code 521.126 for the actual laws.

It isn't clear to me whether an optical scan of a license (i.e., data electronically 'scraped' from an image of the license) would be subject to this law or not.

Apparently, only New Hampshire and Texas have these limitations.
For some reason or another my mag stripe on my license does not work anymore.
by jimlongley
Wed May 08, 2013 11:18 am
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: Buying with a CHL
Replies: 71
Views: 11259

Re: Buying with a CHL

RX8er wrote:
JP171 wrote:
azwe wrote:Refusing to let me copy your ID voids all current and future sales.

well gee umm, good enough for me, keep your merchandise that is over priced and I don't need anyway and I'll spend my money to enrich someone else's life. it is in violation of us government regulations and law to copy some of my ID's and State law for others and my own personal guidelines for my Texas DL issued by DPS as well as my CHL also issued by DPS
What laws make it illegal to copy an ID and state law, a drivers license? And by this I mean not ones specifically calling out for fraudulent purposes.

I know in some normal cases of business, it is done perfectly legal. Go to the doctor and they make a copy of your DL and insurance card. Go to the bank with a large cash deposit and they get a fingerprint and a copy of your DL.
Lately I have been refusing to let the hospital and doctors' offices to make those copies, and they have been pretty compliant. I do point out that they have made copies of the same in the past therefore they do not need new ones. My local hospital "lost" my DL and insurance card a few years back when the copy machine broke down and they took them to a different copy machine and left them there, and I was called in for treatment before they came back. I raised a stink, and even called the police while a hospital administrator offered to write me a note that I could carry in lieu of my DL, and the cop that responded told her that they wouldn't accept the note and I would be arrested for driving without a license. I then insisted that they tear down the hospital brick by brick to find my documents, and the cop just grinned and shrugged.

They can scan my insurance card all they want, but I do not knowingly let them copy my license any more.

When I was being admitted for knee replacement surgery a couple of years ago, the desk person (different hospital from above) asked to "see" my ID and insurance card. I laid both of them on the counter and she immediately started to pick them up. I slammed my hand on top of them and asked her what she thought she was doing, and she stated she was going to make copies. I pointed out that she only had asked to "see" them, not pick them up or copy them and that those documents were my personal property and not to be removed from my possession or sight. After an administrator came out and, eventually, politely asked if they could copy them for security reasons the young lady then started to leave the room with them. She never did make the copies because I would not allow them to take them into the next room where the copier was.

You can refuse.
by jimlongley
Wed May 08, 2013 11:06 am
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: Buying with a CHL
Replies: 71
Views: 11259

Re: Buying with a CHL

azwe wrote:Refusing to let me copy your ID voids all current and future sales.
Just as you insisting on copying my ID does the same.
by jimlongley
Mon May 06, 2013 9:43 am
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: Buying with a CHL
Replies: 71
Views: 11259

Re: Buying with a CHL

sjfcontrol wrote:
G26ster wrote:
RX8er wrote:
AEA wrote:Umm.....Picture on Photocopy of DL & CHL?
That's okay, they have better ones attached to your receipt and transaction number they got from all the CCTV. :cheers2: :biggrinjester:
Or the one the whole world has from your Facebook page :biggrinjester:
My Facebook page does NOT have my picture on it.
Funny, I thought it was a pretty good likeness. :evil2: "rlol" :anamatedbanana

And I wish I still looked the way I do in mine. :cryin

BTW, the 4473 predates the NICS by decades and is really a whole separate process, even if some of the info on it is called in. I have always thought that it was a back door to registration even if long after the fact, because I'll bet that every page that gets turned in (when a dealer goes out of business) ends up in a database somewhere.

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