PhotoSecure DNA Security Printing White Paper
Security Printing Technology
Information technologies are driving a
very rapid growth in the special market of security printing.
Printers of secure documents have an important role to play.
IT has quietly become the major driving force for secure intelligent
and trackable devices. The more successful ticket and label
users have found that the ability to check on the whereabouts
of valuable goods, documents and people is vital to the success
and profit of the business as well as to security; now, IT outweighs
the anti-counterfeiting features of security devices for many
users.
Intaglio have been the key technology for years and still provide
a hard to duplicate original. Guilloche and recently, microprint
and rainbow printing are examples. What's new is digital printing
of numbers and devices for automatic reading for both verification
of production and for data collection after use.
Thermal paper turns colour on application of heat or pressure.
This allows for a simple print head to add unique, timely data
in the field. What is new is colored inks and low cost good
quality stocks. Embossing made from a carefully make die (or
plate for ink) adds to the difficulty of counterfeiting. Intaglio
printing has a natural raised feel. New offset inks have a raised
feel (Ultratherm). Machine readable watermarks on paper and
now digital watermarks for electronic transmissions are innovations.
- Internal
thread; paper stock laminated with materials that show up
when tearing a ticket or can be read by materials that show
up tearing a ticket or can be read by machines. Very simple
and obvious to the collection agent.
- Overprint
films; destruction of laminates or coatings destroys the
security document or changes observed image to make tampering
obvious.
- Fluorescence;
paper can be fluorescent in some conditions. Fluorescence
and special lighting and sensors can be used for anti counterfeiting
purposes.
- Foils;
foil and some natural materials like fish scales and mother
of pearl and some new man-made "deep" images copy as black
spots, a spot of foil in the design of a ticket will be
hard to copy or counterfeit. New is the combination of foil
with numbers etc. and now there are also some materials
that are made of random particles that can provide a unique
finger print to an optical reader.
- Precise
register; very careful register control such as perfect
back to front register is very hard to duplicate.
- Dot
structure moire; screening of images with fine dot patterns
can produce moire patterns that declare void if copied with
other screens. (Void Rantagraph). New is the printed device
which when viewed with a hand held device can show "void"
or other word.
- Magnetic
strip; magnetic inks or tapes can provide security and other
information, particularly useful for tracking of information
about the person or object.
- Color
change inks; clear ink that changes by chemical, pressure
or temperature effects. (Rub and Reveal) (Validator)
- No
copy inks; inks that are spectrally difficult or impossible
to see by most copiers. (Copyproof) New in this field is
(Kopout), an ink/foil system that can not be copied on typical
copying machines.
- OVD's
holograms; the most interesting hard to copy technology
in recent years has been images made from the holographic
technology. Recently the images have moved from traditional
laser light table holograms to optically variable devices
of several kinds incorporating computer generated images
both covert and overt, that improve the security and enable
tracking and the now critical IT functions. There is a great
deal of news in this field as there are more research efforts
in this field than in any other. Holograms are being generated
in minutes by computers (Simian) and in multilevel machine
readable form, numbered, bar coded, placed directly on a
CD ROM (or audio disc) and now embossed directly on press
at press speed. (Nova Vision)
- Smart
card; there is very rapid growth in this field. The smart
card is built on typical credit card technologies but also
has a microchip built in for all of the IT features and
more.
- Biometrics;
fingerprint, voiceprint, DNA, retina, scan All mentioned
as a group; new technologies that are being used for security
purposes. Some have links to print media, some may not.
- RF
signals; some security devices are capable of emitting or
changing electrical fields as a non contact overt security
and information device.
What is the place for printers in this field?
Classes of technology:
- Paper
- Ink
- OVD-holography
- Computer
generated images
- Automatic
inspection (of production, of use)
- Biometrics
Summary of What's
New
1. Technically speaking
- Computer
generated holograms and multilevel optically variable devices.
- High
speed, low cost hologram imaging on press.
- Information
technology; automatic reading and tracking systems.
- Refined
printing techniques; microprint, rainbow, mixed intaglio,
offset and letterpress.
- Paper;
foils, fluorescence, destructive laminates, coatings.
- Ink;
raised, reflective, uncopyable pearlescence.
- Biometrics
- RF
Technology
2. Commercial/Business
- Increased
need for secure devices driven by technical capabilities
of counterfeiters and increased value of event tickets,
intellectual property etc.
- Computerization;
rapid formation of very complex devices from numbering to
OVDs.
- Computerization;
for the many tracking and Information Technology features
that are the driving force of the future.
- Smart
card increase.
- Redemption
coupons have proven to increase the use of amusements.
- Reduction
in use of printed negotiable instruments, but, still important
check writing activity and greatly increased check fraud.
- Growth
in intellectual property sales; music, video, computer programs
and the need for control and tracking of same.
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