A stamp uses ink. They don't accept inked fingerprints any longer. Only electronic fingerprints. Maybe soon they will only accept electronic signatures.sjfcontrol wrote:Welcome to the forum! And welcome to the Instructor's club!GWE Chally wrote:Hi,
I am new here, but I just finished the CHL Instructors course today, along with Keith B.
If I remember correctly, they stated that rubber stamps were NOT ok, but I don't think they specified electronic signatures.
Maybe Keith can clarify.
- Scott
Hard to believe there is a conceptual difference between a stamp and an electronic image signature -- but then DPS has done stranger things...
I'm kidding but it makes as much sense as not allowing a mechanical ink signature when many corporate and government checks are mechanically signed.











 This is one issue that boils my blood like no other, whether it is DPS or any other organization.  Someone somewhere in the organization has created policy on this subject, or any other, but refuses to make it known to those who need to know.  The same thing happened with students electronically submitting their forms.  There has still be no official word on that, but everyone who asks someone from DPS gets a different answer.
 This is one issue that boils my blood like no other, whether it is DPS or any other organization.  Someone somewhere in the organization has created policy on this subject, or any other, but refuses to make it known to those who need to know.  The same thing happened with students electronically submitting their forms.  There has still be no official word on that, but everyone who asks someone from DPS gets a different answer.