Timewaster's Guide Archive

General => Everything Else => Topic started by: Spriggan on May 14, 2003, 02:33:43 AM

Title: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Spriggan on May 14, 2003, 02:33:43 AM
The US treasurey deparment showed what the new $20 bill will look like.  I think the colors go well
http://www.msnbc.com/news/912826.asp
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Gargamel on May 14, 2003, 04:47:27 AM
what is the change, their not green anymore and gray instead?
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Spriggan on May 14, 2003, 04:58:26 AM
did you even look at the link?  There's like 5 colors now
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Gargamel on May 14, 2003, 07:01:34 AM
mayby its my monitor thats not so good
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Mr_Pleasington on May 14, 2003, 12:16:10 PM
Mmmmmmmmmm, sweet color!

Maybe they'll make a 3D bill next. Or Magic Eyes!

Seriously, I wonder how many of our tax dollars went into this.  I imagine more than we'd like.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Mad Dr Jeffe on May 14, 2003, 01:10:38 PM
High priced GS 15 to sit on a committe 150,000 dollars

Design team 30 million dollars

Materials for production 120 million dollars

New Production line 1 billion dollars

Bribes to Congress 15 Billion Dollars

a 20 dollar bill thats worth less than a 20 euro bill......................... Priceless
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: 42 on May 14, 2003, 02:50:00 PM
$30 million for a desing team, I think we got ripped off.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Mad Dr Jeffe on May 14, 2003, 03:00:45 PM
I dont know if that was the actual amount but as someone who's forced to listen to Government budgets day in and out here in DC I wouldn't be that 0surprised.

Im sure they had to hold a competition and had to figure out how to introduce about a thousand other couterfitting foils onto a piece of paper the size of a ... well a 20 dollar bill.

Then there was project editing, redesigning, trial marketing, info groups and so on.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Spriggan on May 15, 2003, 10:37:39 AM
Well in theory it will save us money since the cost of haveing the secret service work on counterfitting probaly is more then the development of this.  And it's not like this is porkbarrel spending
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Mad Dr Jeffe on May 15, 2003, 11:07:05 AM
yes and no, the old money from before the last 20 change is still in circulation and the old bills are still being counterfitted and aged. It will not be phazed out for a while since piles of it are in forigen banks and vaults.  Take into account that the most recent bills are also being counterfitted and wont be completely phazed out for another 10-15 years or so and you can see the huge problem on our hands. Because with the way technology is going its possible to make money from your laser printer soon.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: The Holy Saint, Grand High Poobah, Master of Monkeys, Ehlers on May 15, 2003, 01:27:05 PM
Maybe this seems naive, but it seems to me that before approving a change such as this that both the house committee for such a thing as well as the treasury dept. would have thoroughly evaluated the relative expected cost/reward factors on those issues. As much as we like to hate our gov't, they really aren't made up of morons. At least, not mostly so. And no, I don't think you desktop laser printer will be capable of producing convincing counterfeits of official U.S. currancy any time soon. There are a lot of inticracies that take incredibly expensive equipment for that.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Spriggan on May 15, 2003, 01:29:00 PM
SE is right the watermarks and some of the colors were designed not to read by scanners.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Mad Dr Jeffe on May 15, 2003, 02:01:56 PM
oh, I know they can't now....but give us about 3 years.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: The Holy Saint, Grand High Poobah, Master of Monkeys, Ehlers on May 15, 2003, 02:06:59 PM
3 years won't be enough. This is advanced stuff they do. equipment affordable for home or even general office use isn't even advanced enough to realistically counterfeit bills printed 50 years ago, and it's not likely they'll be able to do so for another 10 at least, at which point we'll have this new stuff widely distributed, which will take quite a bit longer to be able to reproduce. I think you either vastly over-estimate the power of a personal PC or you vastly under-estimate the complexity of a bill of U.S. currency.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Mad Dr Jeffe on May 15, 2003, 02:25:35 PM
I have to disagree with that having had members of the FBI tell me that money from as recently as eight years ago has been succesfully duplicated by home scanners and printers it looks very, very real and can only be discovered by advanced lab techniques...  the biggest obstacle to duplication is not the printing part of the process anyway... its the paper. The paper behind the bills is by far the hardest thing to duplicate because it has tons of little colored fibers inbedded in it.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: The Holy Saint, Grand High Poobah, Master of Monkeys, Ehlers on May 15, 2003, 02:51:15 PM
Those FBI "members" must have been jerking your chain, then. There simply isn't a big market for equipment that high end: not even most businesses require it. Which means the material is expensive. Which means not as many people buy it and it tends to be much more easily traceable.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Mad Dr Jeffe on May 15, 2003, 02:58:31 PM
I doubt the Agents I talked too was jerking my chain especially since they had just given the Commandant (of the coast guard)a briefing about Drug Dealers us large numbers of Counterfit Bills in their operations..
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: The Holy Saint, Grand High Poobah, Master of Monkeys, Ehlers on May 15, 2003, 03:26:43 PM
You'll excuse me if I still have a hard time swallowing it. I've had a lot of hardware experience, both trouble shooting, maintaining, setting up, and operating, and there just isn't something you'd call "standard"  home or office use hardware that will do that sort of work. Sure, there's really expensive stuff that will, but it's not something you'd typically see in someone's home. It's both more expensive and more rare, so easier to trace. ANd like I said, there isn't a big market for it, which is probably the biggest factor for why it isn't common: it costs too much for the minimal revenue return it would mean.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Spriggan on May 15, 2003, 03:31:38 PM
No actualy he's right SE, that's why they changed the $20 bill a few years ago.  Scaning and printing US curency was at an all time high because the old us bills were just to simple to duplicate with a $100 scanner and printer.

http://www.techweb.com/wire/story/TWB19980331S0011
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: House of Mustard on May 15, 2003, 03:38:04 PM
Despite my personal aversion to this kind of thing, I have to side with Ehlers here.

The night the change was announced, there was an accompanying story on the news about how all of the locally made counterfiets are really crappy - mostly made by drug dealers with laser printers.  The only really good counterfiets are coming from international criminals with lots of money to invest in the process.  (of course, those guys are making buckets of money.)
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Spriggan on May 15, 2003, 03:43:22 PM
The new ones that poped up in like 98 are harder to copy with the cheep equipmt  But the ones before that (which is what SE is argueing) we're very easy to copy.  The Treasurey Deparment is just trying to say a step ahead with this new bill.  And anyway I trust what I've read (like that article I posted) about this and not a guy (no offence SE) that's not involved in what's going on.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Mad Dr Jeffe on May 15, 2003, 03:45:57 PM
From the Treasury Dept's Website

-Underlining is my own.

"Counterfeiting: Increasingly Digital
Counterfeiters are increasingly turning to digital methods, as advances in technology make digital counterfeiting of currency easier and cheaper. In 1995, for example, less than 1 percent[/b] of counterfeit notes detected in the U.S. was digitally produced. By 2002, that number had grown to 40 percent /[/b] according to the U.S. Secret Service. "

Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: The Holy Saint, Grand High Poobah, Master of Monkeys, Ehlers on May 15, 2003, 04:46:45 PM
My point is not that digital reproduction is impossible. Merely that it isn't possible with your average home user's printer/scanner. I'm positive digital counterfeiting is increasing, I would have guessed that without seeing numbers. But it takes higher end machinery.

Let me reiterate: my point is that you won't, in just a couple years, be able to run down to best buy, drop $100, and have equipment you can plug into a normal desktop computer capable of realistic counterfeits of U.S. currency. If you disagree, go to BYU and use the equipment in the HumPub to make a counterfeit. To keep it legal, print it on an 8.5x11 page and print on the side "The reproduction on this page is not legal currency." Or add a single black line across the words "legal tender for all debts" on it. This is a fair test, as the humpub has better equipment than your average user has on his desk (in terms of the scanner, anyway). Or find an equivelant set of hardware and run the test. I don't think you can make a convincing fake.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Brian on June 01, 2003, 12:02:27 AM
I read that article on TechWeb, and while I'm sure its accurate, I think they didn't go into enough detail about the quality of these electronic reproductions, or how many people those copies actually fooled.

To produce a copy of a bill printed 10 years ago that would look and feel even remotely believable to the inexperienced eye, I suspect you'd need the right paper (which would be very difficult to come by, unless you know how to make it yourself) and a quality full color laser printer.

Even then, there have been methods in place for a long, long time that deter counterfeits. Serial numbers are of course one of those methods.. I suspect most banks can determine whether the serial number on the bill is real. If the serial number test fails, there is enough detail on a bill that unless you have the capability to print at very high resolutions, its going to be noticeable.

Like SE, I consider myself fairly proficient with technology and image manipulation, but even if I wanted to try to counterfeit a bill (not that I ever would :P) I'm positive I couldn't do it convincingly.

The real threat in counterfeit money still comes from big time criminals with the funds to pull it off convincingly. And I doubt those guys use red-burning ink to print their bills. :P I'm all for our government taking as many steps as possible to deter counterfeiters -- and I'd rather they spend already-budgeted tax money to do it than that they ignore it and let our economy be affected by criminals.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Spriggan on June 02, 2003, 06:48:45 AM
Again it comes down to what the Sceret Service says and what you say.  And I beleave they have alot more experence and knowledge about this then any of us do.  If anyone that frequented TWG has any knoweldge it's 42.  He;s the only profesional artist here.

http://abcnews.go.com/sections/Downtown/2020/Downtown_010601_counterfeitmoney_feature.html

http://www.accessatlanta.com/search/content/partners/wsbtv/news/korbut0905.html

http://www.accessatlanta.com/search/content/partners/wsbtv/news/fake0425.html

http://www.s-t.com/daily/02-00/02-16-00/a01lo006.htm

http://www.bos.frb.org/economic/nerr/rr2000/q2/money.htm

I canfind hundreds of links supporting Mustards and my arguments and not one supporting yours.  You're just flat wrong.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: The Holy Saint, Grand High Poobah, Master of Monkeys, Ehlers on June 02, 2003, 08:43:09 AM
Only one of those articles indicates that the bills were of high quality. And note that i never said it was impossible (at least, I never meant to). Just that You have to spend more than $100 on you printer/scanner combo to get you the equipment to do it. You're cheap run of the mill hardware won't do it. And note also that these examples all seem to have fundamental problems with them. Even if they are capable of fooling a casual observer, they seem to hint that even somone who just looks for a couple key things can discover the forgery.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: Spriggan on June 02, 2003, 08:50:55 AM
I agree with almost everything you just said.  There are flaws, but they are high enough quality to fool most people.  The trained observer can tell a fake done with plates as well.  I don't think you need to spend a lot.  $100 for the scanner, $100 for your printer and your standard $700 Dell computer.  The more you spend on your printer the better the quality.  But certanly the most expensive thing is photoshop ($499) or like program.  I guess you could use Photoshop elements ($79).  The arguemnt I got from you and Brian was that they dindn't fool a lot of people.  True most people won't be useing the fiber paper that the profesionals use, but still most of it fools your adverage store clerk and that's what's important.
Title: Re: New 20 dollar bill
Post by: The Holy Saint, Grand High Poobah, Master of Monkeys, Ehlers on June 02, 2003, 09:05:41 AM
It fools 'em, but not for very long. And it seems that most of these guys get caught.