Absolutetly not because at the time of advertising that car was for sale.
At 10:50 AM 9/1/02 -0700, Max Heim wrote:
>on 9/1/02 7:44 AM, Barrie Robinson at barrier@bconnex.net wrote:
>
> > The reason may be that the car in the photo is not the car on sale - Thus
> > they do not want someone asking about "that car with the number ABC 1234".
> >
>
>Oh, in that case it would just be fraud, or at least misrepresentation...
>
>
> > At 10:40 AM 8/30/02 -0700, Max Heim wrote:
> >> on 8/30/02 7:39 AM, David F. Darby at darby@tri-lakes.net wrote:
> >>
> >>> BTW, here is a stupid question, but why do people block out license
> numbers
> >>> (as in this example) on internet photos? What on Earth do they think they
> >>> are protecting against? Just curious.
> >>>
> >>> David
> >>
> >> Yeah, that was my question. As if anybody driving down the street
> can't read
> >> your license number... goofy. I think maybe they are extrapolating
> from the
> >> general reluctance to post VIN numbers on the web (which is also paranoid,
> >> IMO). I mean, who's more likely to steal your car -- some guy on the
> >> Internet a thousand miles away, or somebody in your home town who sees
> your
> >> car on the street?
> >>
> >>
> >> --
> >>
> >> Max Heim
> >> '66 MGB GHN3L76149
> >> If you're near Mountain View, CA,
> >> it's the primer red one with chrome wires
> >>
> >
> > Regards
> > Barrie
> >
> > Barrie Robinson - barrier@bconnex.net
> >
>
>
>--
>
>Max Heim
>'66 MGB GHN3L76149
>If you're near Mountain View, CA,
>it's the primer red one with chrome wires
>
Regards
Barrie
Barrie Robinson - barrier@bconnex.net
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