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HTPBE?

Structural PDF tamper detection API. Catches edits your KYC stack misses.

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© 2024–2026 TMI Iurii Rogulia · VAT ID: FI29845875 · Made in Finland 🇫🇮

Status

Algorithm v2.37.1

Tool profile

Scanner HP

Scanner HP appears on both legitimate first-generation output and downstream re-save flows — context (the other tool on the same document) is what flips the signal.

Back to all statistics
Forensic verdict

Mixed signal

Based on this tool’s share of the HTPBE? corpus.

Modification rate
88%+40pp above baseline
Corpus baseline: 48%
Corpus share
0.6%
Share of all analyzed appearances
Modification rate
88%
+40pp above baseline
Role split
96%C/4%P
Creator vs Producer share of appearances

Corpus profile

How Scanner HP shows up in HTPBE? corpus

Scanner HP is one of the PDF-handling tools surfaced in the HTPBE? corpus. Scanner HP appears predominantly as the original Creator (96% of its occurrences) — i.e. on documents that started life inside Scanner HP rather than passing through it as a downstream re-saver.

In the HTPBE? corpus the contextual signal we look for is a producer/creator mismatch: when Scanner HP appears as the latest Producer on a document whose Creator was an institutional source (e.g. Adobe PDF Library, Microsoft Word, a banking back-end), the document was rebuilt or re-saved after its original creation. That mismatch is the marker — never the tool itself.

On documents where Scanner HP acts as Creator, 91% carry modification markers; on documents where it acts as Producer, 20% do. These are observed rates inside the HTPBE? corpus and should be read as base-rates, not as accusations against Scanner HP or its users.

The signal
In the HTPBE? corpus the contextual signal we look for is a producer/creator mismatch: when Scanner HP appears as the latest Producer on a document whose Creator was an institutional source (e.g. Adobe PDF Library, Microsoft Word, a banking back-end), the document was rebuilt or re-saved after its original creation. That mismatch is the marker — never the tool itself.

Role in the workflow

How Scanner HP shows up in metadata

Every PDF carries a Creator (the application that produced the original document) and a Producer (the engine that wrote the PDF). The same tool can appear in either slot, with very different modification profiles.

CAs Creator · 96%
As Producer · 4%P
CAs Creator
  • Share of appearances
    96%
  • Modification rate
    91%
  • Avg file size
    681 KB
PAs Producer
  • Share of appearances
    4%
  • Modification rate
    20%
  • Avg file size
    292 KB

How to read this

The Creator slot typically reflects where a document started life. The Producer slot reflects whatever wrote the bytes — and is the field that gets overwritten when a PDF is opened, edited, and saved by a downstream tool.

A higher modification rate as Producer than as Creator usually means the tool is acting as a re-saver on documents that originated elsewhere. A higher rate as Creator points to fragile workflows around the original authoring app.

Name fingerprints

Also goes by

Different version strings and spellings observed for Scanner HP in the wild. All are merged into the same canonical profile.

Hewlett-Packard MFP91.0%
HP Scan3.7%
HP Scan Extended Application3.7%
HP Smart Document Scan Software 3.801.5%

Why variants matter

The same tool publishes itself under 4 different metadata strings — version bumps, locale tags, build IDs. We canonicalize them so the corpus reflects one identity, not noise.

Most common
Hewlett-Packard MFP
91.0% of appearances
Variant spread
4 distinct strings
Long-tail share: 9.0%
Observed range
13.05.2015 → 13.05.2026

Distributions

What ships alongside Scanner HP

The PDF versions Scanner HP writes when acting as Producer, and the other tools that appear in the same documents.

PDF versions written

Most output is PDF 1.7 (100% of files where Scanner HP is the Producer).

PDF 1.7100.0%

Common Producers when Scanner HP is the Creator

3-Heights writes 90% of these files — that pairing is the Adobe-stack default for many institutional pipelines.

3-Heights89.9%
OmniPage1.6%

Related profiles

Tools you’ll see next to Scanner HP

Other tools that frequently share metadata with Scanner HP in the same documents. Each card links to its own forensic profile.

P87% co-occurrence
3-Heights
Corpus share0.6%
Mod rate93%
P1% co-occurrence
OmniPage
Corpus share0.02%
Mod rate60%

Long tail

Notable observations

Smaller cuts of the Scanner HP corpus — useful context, but treat each row as a single data point rather than a strong signal.

Avg pages per document
7.1
Oldest observed
13.05.2015 — about 11 years ago

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