- Location
- gormley ontario
I wondering why the ser # of firearms are usually blocked out in pictures.
I thought that we got rid of the registry and the serial numbers aren't listed anywhere. So it doesn't matter.
Because people are paranoid, if somebody, somehow, started a transfer on one of your firearms it won't complete until you personally confirm it.
I personally do it because I do not trust the security of our registry system.
Numerous occasions of it being hacked into,.... Yes I am paranoid. I do know someone that feels they were targeted because of a photo with the serial # in it as well (long story but interesting none the less). All it takes is some scumbag to use the # to determine my address, if I own other firearms, and if my collection is worth targeting.
Yes I'm paranoid, but why take the chance when internet crimes outnumber all other crime combined

As mentioned, it's part of general privacy, especially as the information we need to give a buyer is the majority of what the CFC asks us for to identify ourselves.
Other than that and the remote possibility of someone using the serial number to file a theft report the only thing I can think of is that it is an identifying feature that might prove the difference between a well-maintained antique collectable and a badly-beaten gun made five years ago.
Or tinfoil shadow registries and all that. I view it as a point of pride to photoshop out the number. I try to do it seamlessly so people might get paranoid and think that I have a gun that never got one stamped.
Like my old Daniel Defense M4 V5 that has since moved on to the great beyond. Probably Mexico by now. Check out the upper left picture, let me know how it looks. I think it turned out okay for a quick shop job.
Off topic but which brand of fire control group is that in the Daniel Defense?



























