Machine detectable document of value

Printed matter – Having revealable concealed information – fraud preventer or... – Having specific color

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C283S091000, C283S072000, C283S901000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06530602

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a document of value consisting of a substrate of predetermined surface area with a printed image visible to the naked eye and a marking in the form of characters, patterns or the like at least partly superimposed on the printed image, said marking having a given regularity which allows manipulations of the document to be recognized. The term “document of value” will be used in the following text as a general term for all kinds of documents of value, i.e. vouchers, tickets, identity cards, bank notes, securities, shares and the like.
Vouchers or tickets to be used for several events, such as public transport tickets to be used for several journeys, usually consist of a strip-shaped paper carrier divided into a plurality of likewise strip-shaped fields. One field corresponds to a certain amount of money. The fare for using public transport is frequently a multiple of this amount so that the money value of several fields is required for one journey. In order not to have to cancel each field singly, it suffices in known systems to cancel the last field, in the given order, of the fields to be canceled. The fields therebefore which are not directly canceled are thereby deemed canceled as well. This procedure means that in completely canceled tickets some of the single fields are always uncanceled. If these fields are cut out of different canceled tickets, they can be assembled into an apparently new, unused ticket.
In order to prevent such forgeries it has been proposed in DE 32 16 485 C1 to subject the tickets during production to an additional printing operation in which a continuous wave-line pattern is applied to the tickets. This is done on the paper web before it is cut into the individual tickets. For the additional printing operation one uses a printing cylinder whose circumference is a nonintegral multiple of the ticket length so that the wave-line pattern extending continually within a ticket is somewhat offset from the wave-line pattern of the next ticket. This prevents uncanceled fields from being indiscriminately lined up since the wave line normally has discontinuities at the transitions between fields due to the different tickets. To simulate an authentic ticket a potential forger would thus have to make sure the wave lines of the individual fields join up seamlessly. There is little probability of a forger having the suitable fields available.
However, the advantages of the method known from DE 32 16 485 C1 are only effective in the case of a visual check. If such security patterns are to be tested by machine this would require an effort in measurement technology which is unjustified in many cases, since it would involve elaborate calculating processes making the method uneconomical for many applications.
The invention is therefore based on the problem of providing a document of value whose authenticity and intactness can be tested relatively simply by machine.
The solution to this problem results from the machine-readable features of the present invention, including several different embodiments.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention starts out from the basic idea that one can recognize forgeries and specific falsifications of documents by testing the presence and defined distribution of machine readable feature substances preferably unrecognizable without technical aids. The assembly of new authentic documents from fragments of different authentic documents is additionally impeded if the distribution on the document is effected in coded form and the coded information is varied at a sufficiently low repetition rate from document to document of a series of documents and/or from partial area to partial area of a document. The control information of the documents is checked either via defined mathematical relations or with reference to data records stored in specific data bases.
According to the invention the document of value has a marking represented by means of a feature substance and extending over the predominant part of the document in order to permit not only the authenticity of the document but also the completeness of the document material to be machine readable. The distribution of the feature substance over the surface of the document makes gaps or added partial elements of other authentic documents recognizable as disturbances.
It is known from the prior art to provide documents of value with feature substances to permit their authenticity to be detected by a machine (U.S. Pat. No. 4,255,652). However, the feature substance is not applied here so as to extend over the total or the predominant part of the surface, so that it is possible to manipulate unmarked areas or replace them by forgeries. In addition, all documents of a series have the same marking so that manipulations by combining partial elements of authentic documents of a series are unrecognizable as long as the visible printed image is retained.
In a preferred embodiment, the document of value consists of a strip-shaped paper carrier subdivided into likewise strip-shaped funds-equivalent partial areas preferably extending transversely to the longitudinal extension of the document. These partial area are defined by a printed image visible to the naked eye. Moreover, the document has a linearly executed marking consisting of a machine readable feature substance preferably invisible when viewed without aids, said marking being at least partly superimposed on the visible printed image and extending over the predominant part of the document. These marking lines preferably extend obliquely to the cancelable funds-equivalent strips given by the normal printed image and constitute a coding.
When the document of value is checked, the authenticity of the document material can be detected via the presence of the right feature substance. The coding contents additionally permit inferences to be drawn about the completeness of the document material. If the read information on a document to be tested does not match the given coded information, this indicates that parts of the original document are either completely lacking or were replaced by forgeries or parts of other authentic documents.
The coding moreover offers the advantage that a large amount of testable information can be stored. Thus, the coding can contain for example information on the nature or the intended use of the document, which can be of benefit for swift machine processing of the documents.
In the above-described embodiment, the information contained in the coding is the same for all partial areas. According to a further embodiment, it is also possible to provide groups of partial areas or each individual partial area with a different coding. However, at least the codings of adjacent partial areas preferably have a mathematical relationship to each other. In this case the marking is composed of a plurality of different information parts, which further heightens the protection from forgery since it increases the effort a potential forger must expend in order to successfully combine parts of other authentic documents with the document being manipulated.
Additional protection from forgery arises if the marking varies from document to document at least at a certain repetition rate. During production of documents of value in endless format this can be effected in a very simple way by applying the marking or machine-readable feature substance with the aid of a special printing cylinder whose circumference corresponds to a nonintegral multiple of the document extension, the repetition rate being determinable via the circumference of the cylinder. This permits the content or form of the marking to be identical for all documents, while the offset produces an individualization via the position of the feature substance at least for a series of consecutive documents.
In order to attain the same goal in sheet printing one must produce a plurality of printing plates, depending on the desired repetition rate, which are provided in the area of each copy with a marking pattern offset from the preceding

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