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- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Path: sparky!uunet!infonode!ingr!b30news!catbyte.b30.ingr.com!medin
- From: medin@catbyte.b30.ingr.com (Dave Medin)
- Subject: Re: Anti-shoplifting devices and magnetic media
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.182813.19860@b30.ingr.com>
- Sender: usenet@b30.ingr.com (Usenet Feed)
- Reply-To: medin@catbyte.b30.ingr.com
- Organization: Intergraph Corporation, Huntsville AL
- References: <1992Nov14.122228.17435@husc3.harvard.edu> <Bxw8IL.G95@wang.com>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 18:28:13 GMT
- Lines: 52
-
- In article <Bxw8IL.G95@wang.com>, dbushong@wang.com (Dave Bushong) writes:
- |> bdenckla@husc10.harvard.edu (Benjamin Denckla) writes:
- |>
- |> >This morning I walked in and out of a number of shops with
- |> >anti-shoplifting detectors similar to the security devices they have in
- |> >libraries, i.e. two vertical inverted U-shaped bars on either side of the
- |> >exit. Then I found that the disk I had been carrying had some errors on
- |> >it which were not there beforehand. I assume that this is some kind of a
- |> >detector for non-demagnetized, i.e. not bought merchandise. I have heard
- |> >that the demagnetizing pads on the check out-counter will erase credit
- |> >cards so I try to stay away from them. But can anyone tell me if my disk
- |> >could have been damaged by the detectors? Also, how far away should I
- |> >keep magnetic media like disks, credit cards, and DAT's from the
- |> >demagnetizing check out counter pad? is a foot enough? If anyone could
- |> >help I would really appreciate this as this is a very scary situation,
- |> >especially without information as to exactly how scared I should be.
-
- |> Take your tour again, but this time with a pocket compass. If it
- |> doesn't violently react to the devices, the diskette is probably
- |> safe. By the way, the reaction I was talking about is one which,
- |> if the compass could talk, it would say boinnnnggggggg! Normally
- |> the disk would have to be close to the magnet to affect it; or the
- |> magnet would have to be strong enough where you would feel the pull
- |> on your car keys in your pocket.
-
- Unless, of course, the field were alternating (which they probably are
- to detect a hysteresis change in the anti-theft material), when the compass
- wouldn't do you a bit of good.
-
- Hold a piece of steel or a small magnet up against the detector. On the
- chance that the frequency is in the audio range, does it buzz? BTW,
- most keys are brass, not steel, so they can be cut easily, and would
- not make good detectors.
-
- Being that magnetic fields decline as the cube of distance, I would
- doubt that they were at fault in corrupting your disk unless you
- rubbed up against a detector.
-
- I saw a demag pad at my local Wal-Mart where the notice, yet
- unremoved, said to keep credit cards more than 6" away.
-
- --
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