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Xerox Exploits Printer Flaws To Make Pseudo-Holograms

Red Wolf writes "A chance discovery by Xerox lets printers superimpose glossy images on regular printouts, creating the possibility for document authentication along the lines of holograms on credit cards. The new technology, called Glossmark, can use ordinary office printers to superimpose a glossy image on an ordinary printed document in a way that can't be photocopied or otherwise easily reproduced."

6 of 187 comments (clear)

  1. Color laserjets? by groove10 · · Score: 5, Informative

    From reading the article (yes I read actually read it), it would seem that only the "wax" type color laserjet printers have this ability. There was a Slashdot article a while back that dealt with color laser printers and alternatives to inkjets. The news.com.com article does specify the models or type of printers where this was discovered. Any other info on this?

    I'm sure some hackers will try to do some mods on their printers to control this as well. {cough}fake holograms{/cough}

    On another note, how cool a job do these "Xerox Scientists" have? I need to get a job where I can hardware hack like these guys.

    --
    MMORPG fan-boy? Prove your worth
  2. Re:But it's true... by schmink182 · · Score: 4, Informative
    You might note that they noted this in the article: The company ultimately will have to decide--if it is intended to be a security-enhancing process aimed at authenticating documents, having the technology widely available to would-be document forgers would be a problem, Rolleston said.

    They apparently are considering using the exploit decoratively instead of for security, since it is always possible to forge something made by "common office printers."

  3. Re:So let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I could make a damn good couterfeit $20 bill if I only had the paper and the press that makes them.

    And your aunt could be your uncle, if she only had balls and a dick.

    You might get the paper by bleaching one-dollar bills, but you damn sure ain't getting the press. The Intaglio process used on U.S. currency applies the ink to the paper at great pressure, and in sufficient quantity to achieve an embossed effect. U.S. currency has a distinctive feel because of this, and were you to slip an inkjet or color laser-printed bleached-single $20 bill into a stack of $20s you used to pay for something, the cashier would notice it didn't feel right before he/she noticed it didn't look right.

    Intaglio presses are huge, somewhat rare, and cost in the millions of dollars, so you ain't gonna but putting one in your basement anytime soon. If you had the financial capability to do so, you wouldn't need to counterfeit money.

    Having said that, the Secret Service does have counterfeit bills produced by Intaglio presses, and believe that they are being produced by the government of some country hostile to the U.S.-- because that's the kind of moxie it takes to get your hands on an Intaglio press.

  4. not layered prints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    From what I gathered reading the article... this *technology* is about controlling the glossyness of certain areas on a printed page. I don't think it involves running printed pages back through the printer... instead words/images would be differentiated by their gloss relative to the flat ink surrounding them. Looking straight at a matt photograph one would see nothing unusuall but looking at an angle one could make out shiny text, the degree of gloss is controlled, hence the "invisible to the eye" option.

    just my 2c,
    -ry

  5. Re:Currency by Jack+Auf · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's already so easy to counterfit U.S. money, using Xerox printers.

    Ahem, where exactly are you going to get the paper to print it on? US currency paper has a special cotton content that you can't get in the states, even by special order. And what about the "security stripe"? Nope, sorry.

    --
    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - BF
  6. Re:Currency by gurumeditationerror · · Score: 3, Informative

    I don't live in america but if I remember correctly all your notes are the same size, wash a 1 dollar bill and print 100 on it... We can't do that in the UK cos 1,5 10, 20, 50... are all bigger than the lesser valued note. Umm... Not thatI'm condoning counterfeiting or was considering it ~*shifty eyes*~