I'm aiming to photoshop the date of a medical note I got in the past to get out of an exam that I'm not prepared for.
What are the odds of getting caught with forgery?
If the edit is done really well, what could the teacher do to get suspicious and prosecute me, save hire a forensic analyst (which would never happen.)
>>17715022
Your thinking too much just do a good job they won't go snooping they will shrug it off
>>17715026
Yeah and I'ts literally a super minor detail of the note to change (on number). Just wondering if there are horror stories of professors catching a student
imagine if you had just put this amount of effort into your schoolwork instead
>>17715045
I did for my other midterms, lack of time and family crisis made preparing difficult.
>>17715038
Yeah don't stress they won't notice and no I know of no horror stories. There is no way he will find out. If some crazy shit happens and he somehow does you probably didn't do a good job. You'll be fine
HIPPA laws do not permit doctors to tell random people who call whether your doctor's note is valid or not. They are not allowed to say whether or not you are a patient, and definitely cannot disclose medical information. As long as you aren't photoshopping the exact same not you used before with the exact same handwriting, it should be fine.
>>17715065
This is where shit gets shady. It IS the same note, but there is no handwriting, just a stamped date and insurance card. I'm simply modifying the angle that the paper was scanned, and slightly changing the angle of the stamp to make it believable.
My excuse will be that the condition that originally inhibited me is still affecting me. Too close to the sun on this one?
>>17715058
Ok, that's what I'll do then. Fingers crossed lads