The Disabled American Veterans, recognized the impact it would have with the outset of World War II. In 1941, To raise funds, DAV launched a direct mail campaign, distributing “IdentoTags”, miniature license plates which could be attached to a keyring with instructions that lost keys should be mailed to the DAV, who would return them to the owners. The DAV got state motor vehicle departments to co-operate and provide mailing lists of the people who registered their cars. The DAV mailed key-chain tags with your license plate number on it, and asked for a donation. Thus, if you lost your keys, the finder would drop them into a mail box, the keys would be forwarded to the DAV which would return them to you. The program continued from 1941 through 1975, and was ended because of a “right to privacy” rule.
How is what Oregon doing legal?