Quote:
Originally Posted by EODguy
I know that but say for example a seal is used. Unless the Government has a registered copy of it then any seal on the paperwork would pass inspection and not to mention that a seal would probably be a "family" stamp/seal so a husband, wife, sons and unmarried daughters would have the same one meaning multiple papers with the same stamp until the kids start their own families.
I'm not sure how to get around the possible problems listed above, but it's a thought
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Think of it in terms of individual seal instead of a family emblem or seal.
The way it works in these country is everybody select a specific font for their name and have it carved into a rectangular piece of stone or some type of hard plastic. The groves on the imprint soaks up the red ink and you leave your specific imprint on important document, along with your signature.
This seal is usually used in your banking accounts, or any census, property related documents stored in your local township household registration office.
So the government would have an exact copy of your seal on file to match it against.
Seals are usually only effective when you've turned adulthood and can register to vote. So kids would not need a seal of their own since they can't vote anyway.
I'm sure a signature along with an unique seal can be stored in government data base and retrieved at the necessary time to verify identify for a number of public functions.