Chronos:"...it is impossible to tell one from the other."
What about this?
Let's make a convention for describing a charged black hole.
[m=matter/a=antimatter][BH][charge=+/-][excess/deficit=particle</>particle]
where the excess or deficit charge particle is
p=proton
e=electron
ap=antiproton
ae=antielectron
So we get these possible charged BH descriptions:
mBH+p>e = matter BH with positive charge due to more protons than electrons
mBH-p<e = matter BH with negative charge due to fewer protons than electrons
aBH-ap>ae = antimatter BH with negative charge due to more antiprotons than antielectrons
aBH+ap<ae = antimatter BH with positive charge due to fewer antiprotons than antielectrons
In all cases where the charge is the same polarity, the responsible particle sets of more and the sets of fewer are comprised of particles of different masses. For example, for the two positive charged BH configurations, one is caused by more protons and the other is caused by more antielectrons.
For the same charge polarity and magnitude, the same number of particles (p or ae) comprises the magnitude of the charge, but these particles have different masses in the two cases, likewise with the two negative charged BH cases.
To test the matter/antimatter attribute of a charged black hole, couldn't one toss in a known number of charged particles? The change in mass would just be the mass of the added particles as any annihilation of mass would go to equivalent energy, but wouldn't the charge change differentially because an annihilation would cause the lost particles to no longer contribute charge?
If so, then tossing buckets of N of p, e, ap, and ae into the four types of charged BH should do this:
(where + and - indicates the direction of charge change)
mBH+p>e = [+,-,-,+]
mBH-p<e = [+,-,-,-]
aBH-ap>ae = [+,-,+,-]
aBH+ap<ae = [+,-,+,+]
All four results are different, so why wouldn't this method indicate the matter / antimatter attribute of a BH?
I must be missing something... ;)