A product that hides license plates from traffic-enforcement cameras at intersections may appeal to those frustrated by malfunctioning cameras but poses a major safety threat from those who hope to ...
Motorists have litigated against them, fired bullets at them and thrown garbage on them — all to get back at the traffic cameras that have caught them in the act of running a red light or speeding.
When you run a red light and the red-light camera catches you, you are busted. With fines starting at $50, drivers are snapping up products designed to block the cameras. Photoblocker is a spray-on ...
A clear spray that distorts a license plate image – and helps drivers beat tickets for running a red light – is selling like hotcakes, despite a law banning its use. PhotoBlocker is being sold in ...
Area police say motorists who use a clear spray that obscures license plates to traffic cameras can be charged with defacing their plates, despite manufacturers’ claims that the sprays are legal. The ...
Nope, call PhantomPlate Inc., in Harrisburg, Pa. The same Web that inundates consumers daily with spam has finally come up with a useful bit of information: how to order a can of PhotoBlocker, a spray ...
Okay, so this clever ad agency in South America outed a particularly fun gadget whose only function is to ruin photos. How can that be fun? Well, to answer the question you need to know the backstory ...
Nope, call PhantomPlate Inc. in Harrisburg, Pa. The same computer spam that inundates consumers daily finally has delivered a useful bit of information: How to order a can of PhotoBlocker, a spray ...
We're definitely not launching a "Sprayables" section or anything, but after Monday's post about that dubious PhotoBlocker spray which is supposed to be able to help you avoid getting caught by ...