Possibly, but it seems highly unlikely that these attorneys would be using junk OCR software that can't make out words that are very clearly printed in a standard font. Errors like that usually occur when scanning old newspaper clippings or poor quality faxed documents, etc. And they obviously had the original, so why would they even be scanning it -- just convert directly to PDF. There are no actual signatures on the document.
Like I said, highlight it, you can see the software reading the "path" of the text got confused.
You ever broken down the properties of an exported or "saved as" PDF - in Acrobat? ... I have ... there's often a LOT of data in there you do NOT want to share.
The file that was printed and submitted won't have spelling mistakes.
OCR document scanning software did that, note the "break" in that word when you highlight it ... software error in reading a document.
Possibly, but it seems highly unlikely that these attorneys would be using junk OCR software that can't make out words that are very clearly printed in a standard font. Errors like that usually occur when scanning old newspaper clippings or poor quality faxed documents, etc. And they obviously had the original, so why would they even be scanning it -- just convert directly to PDF. There are no actual signatures on the document.
Like I said, highlight it, you can see the software reading the "path" of the text got confused.
You ever broken down the properties of an exported or "saved as" PDF - in Acrobat? ... I have ... there's often a LOT of data in there you do NOT want to share. The file that was printed and submitted won't have spelling mistakes.