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.
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
Normally we know better than to buy any kind of spray anything being sold on the Internet, but PhotoBlocker is a special reflective spray that's supposed to be able to make it impossible for traffic ...
The District is cracking down on drivers who obscure their license plates from the city’s traffic cameras. Police officers have begun enforcing a new law that has raised fines from $50 to $500 for ...
"Our purpose is to change driving behavior and make the streets safer," Lt. Mike Venema, said. "It's not suppose to be a pleasant experience to get a traffic citation. The goal is to change behavior." ...
Love them or loathe them, their photos don’t lie. Floor it through one of Virginia Beach’s camera-monitored intersections and you’ll get a $50 ticket in the mail. Here’s a question: If you could ...
People in prison are especially good at this kind of thing: coming up with new ways to beat the system. One of the newest “systems” in the Quad-Cities is the red light and speed cameras that will be ...
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 ...
Jason, I thought "polarizing", too, when I first saw it, but I don't think so. I was fascinated by it when I saw, like any monkey with a shiny object, and so I played with it a bit. I turned it all ...