Comment by fc417fc802
16 hours ago
The blog has no relevance to your claim that the print and scan procedure somehow fundamentally precludes automated search and replace. I refuted that. You remain free to perform automated search and replace prior to printing the document. You also have the flexibility to perform manual redactions both digitally as well as physically with ink.
It's clearly a superior process that provides ease of use, ease of understanding, and is exceedingly difficult to screw up. Barr's DoJ should be commended for having selected a procedure that minimizes the risk of systemic failure when carried out by a collection of people with such diverse technical backgrounds and competence levels.
Notably, had the same procedure been followed for the Epstein files then the headline we are currently commenting under presumably wouldn't exist.
> The blog has no relevance to your claim that the print and scan procedure somehow fundamentally precludes automated search and replace.
It has direct relevance since it describes the process as lacking the automated search and replace
> I refuted that
You didn't, you created a meaningless process of underlinig text digitally to waste time redacting it on paper for no reason but add more mistakes, and also replaced the quoted reality with your made up situation to "refute".
> and is exceedingly difficult to screw up.
It's trivial, and I've told you how in the previous comment
> Notably, had the same procedure been followed for the Epstein files then the headline we are currently commenting under presumably wouldn't exist.
Nope, this is generic "hack" headline, so guessing a redacted name by comparing the length of plaintext to unmask would fit the headline just as well as a copy&paste hack