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Maybe this explains it?
Wow this is bigger that watergate!
YouTube - Washington Times: Newly Released Obama Birth Certificate Forensic Forgery - 4/29/11
I'll bet serious money that you posted that URL and then never clicked on it to see if you could indeed download the document from that site. And I'll win the bet. The Whitehouse's Web site is a .gov site, not a .com site.You can download his certificate at whitehouse.com
Only to those who don't understand how scanning software works when scanning a document to a PDF file with the OCR setting on the software turned on. The layers are automatically computer generated, not manually generated as one would do with Photoshop. You can do it yourself, it's easy. If you scan a document with OCR enabled, convert it to a PDF, optimize that PDF, and then open it up in Illustrator or Photoshop, you will see the same layers similar to what is seen in the birth certificate PDF. This is PDF scanning 101, sheesh.Wow this is bigger that watergate!
I'll bet serious money that you posted that URL and then never clicked on it to see if you could indeed download the document from that site. And I'll win the bet. The Whitehouse's Web site is a .gov site, not a .com site.
Only to those who don't understand how scanning software works when scanning a document to a PDF file with the OCR setting on the software turned on. The layers are automatically computer generated, not manually generated as one would do with Photoshop. You can do it yourself, it's easy. If you scan a document with OCR enabled, convert it to a PDF, optimize that PDF, and then open it up in Illustrator or Photoshop, you will see the same layers similar to what is seen in the birth certificate PDF. This is PDF scanning 101, sheesh.
[noparse]No, one doesn't have anything to do with the other. They are two separate issues, which is why I addressed them as such.So what are you saying Turtle? Are you saying this point about the layers is not accurate since the birth cert was obtained from a site that is not really the whitehouse?
The other issue is the point about the layers. It is incorrect because the people making it an issue are either stupid or ignorant about scanning software and OCR software and how it works. They see "layers" in a document and know that you can manually create layers in Photoshop, and think that all layers in all documents therefore can only be created manually in Photoshop, when layers have been a part of Adobe Illustrator since Illustrator 88 (version 2), and a part of OCR software since Ray Kurzweil invented OCR layering to differentiate between blocks of text and blocks of graphic images. Layers are used today in OCR software to separate out not only text and graphics, but to separate out successful and unsuccessful (or questionable) character recognition. The layers to be found in the birth certificate are classic OCR layers, and anyone who has had any kind of experience with OCR software knows it.
So what are you saying? The guy who uncovered this, and uses the software daily, doesn't know what he's talking about?
...... The other issue is the point about the layers. It is incorrect because the people making it an issue are either stupid or ignorant about scanning software and OCR software and how it works. They see "layers" in a document and know that you can manually create layers in Photoshop, and think that all layers in all documents therefore can only be created manually in Photoshop, when layers have been a part of Adobe Illustrator since Illustrator 88 (version 2), and a part of OCR software since Ray Kurzweil invented OCR layering to differentiate between blocks of text and blocks of graphic images. Layers are used today in OCR software to separate out not only text and graphics, but to separate out successful and unsuccessful (or questionable) character recognition. The layers to be found in the birth certificate are classic OCR layers, and anyone who has had any kind of experience with OCR software knows it.
Yes, that's exactly what I'm saying. Just because he uses the software daily doesn't mean he understands how it all works, or that he knows what he's talking about, because clearly he doesn't. Some of the things he said in the video are just bust-a-gut laugh out loud funny. It's like he got most of his computer knowledge from the movies or TV, where you can do things like manually override any computer that won't let you in, and use Visual Basic to create a GUI interface to trace an IP address. <snort>So what are you saying? The guy who uncovered this, and uses the software daily, doesn't know what he's talking about?
You mean scan a filled-out form and get it back to its original blank state? No, it doesn't work that way. You can't scan a filled-out form and magically remove everything that's been added to the blank. At least not easily. You can do it, but it takes a bit of work. Some of the "fields" will be separated out either for OCR processing or compression, but some will be left untouched. It all depends on how the software is configured and what parts of the document the software sees as "background" and some as "foreground" to be compressed or analyzed. I scanned a filled-out Panther form and turned it into an electronically fillable blank form, but it took some doing. It would have been a Herculean task if it were not for the layers that were created, tho.So.............. are you telling me that if I scan a true copy of a government form onto my computer, and then open it in photoshop, I will be able to see all the layers? Like... before it had a signature, and before it had a seal, etc?
The guy in the video has a phone in his hand with a pull-out antenna similar to the very first cell phone I ever owned, a Motorola StarTac. Kinda blows his credibility as a geek. Unless pull-out antennae are now chic and the dude is into retro-geek.Yes, the guy on the video gives a pretty convincing argument for people like me who don't know a lot about layers and ocr, etc. so can you comment on what he is saying?
The guy in the video has a phone in his hand with a pull-out antenna similar to the very first cell phone I ever owned, a Motorola StarTac. Kinda blows his credibility as a geek. Unless pull-out antennae are now chic and the dude is into retro-geek.
You mean scan a filled-out form and get it back to its original blank state? No, it doesn't work that way. You can't scan a filled-out form and magically remove everything that's been added to the blank. At least not easily. You can do it, but it takes a bit of work. Some of the "fields" will be separated out either for OCR processing or compression, but some will be left untouched. It all depends on how the software is configured and what parts of the document the software sees as "background" and some as "foreground" to be compressed or analyzed. I scanned a filled-out Panther form and turned it into an electronically fillable blank form, but it took some doing. It would have been a Herculean task if it were not for the layers that were created, tho.
You and Turtle need a wedgie, uber-geeks!
One of our outstanding Fleet Owners is looking for experienced Straight Truck Teams to run V3 freight across the country!-Newer model Cascadia Freightliner-96-inch sleeper-Fully loadedContractor Requirements:• Be able to read, write, understand and speak the English language.• At all times behave courteously and professionally• ... Apply Today!