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Casey November 8th, 2003 04:05 PM

Counterfeit Euro detection
 
Does anyone know a URL that explains the security features of
Euro notes, i.e. a webpage that explains how to spot a counterfeit
Euro note?


Casey



Gernot Egger November 8th, 2003 04:12 PM

Counterfeit Euro detection
 
Casey wrote:
Does anyone know a URL that explains the security features of
Euro notes, i.e. a webpage that explains how to spot a counterfeit
Euro note?


http://www.euro.ecb.int/

- http://www.euro.ecb.int/en/section/recog.html

lg Gernot



tile November 8th, 2003 07:30 PM

Counterfeit Euro detection
 
In Italy a prinitng house has been found with million
of
50eur banknotes.
apparently they are good enough and have different serial numbers.
"Casey" ha scritto nel messaggio
ink.net...
Does anyone know a URL that explains the security features of
Euro notes, i.e. a webpage that explains how to spot a counterfeit
Euro note?


Casey





tim November 8th, 2003 07:40 PM

Counterfeit Euro detection
 

"Gernot Egger" wrote in message ...
Casey wrote:
Does anyone know a URL that explains the security features of
Euro notes, i.e. a webpage that explains how to spot a counterfeit
Euro note?


There was a news item yesterday telling how many dud notes
there are. There are apparently even people counterfeiting the
coins! (I suppose that give the 15 different designs and the
fact that most people will have seen few outside their own
country's you could probably pass a coin with micky mouse
on it unchallenged).

So they asked people to spot the counterfeits (on a "which of
these two is counterfeit" basis) and apparently almost no-one
got it. This surprises me, I am confident that I could tell a
counterfeit note if I was asked to look (unless it was so good
that the bank would be fooled) but TBH I doubt that I'd notice
if I got one in my change as I just don't have the time (or the
courage) to check every note that the cashier gives me.

BTW probably the best way to tell a 'real' note is to look
for the 'two-tone' ink used on the 50s and above. I suspect
that this is beyond the counterfeiters (or perhaps, is not cost
effective)

tim




http://www.euro.ecb.int/

- http://www.euro.ecb.int/en/section/recog.html

lg Gernot




Thomas Peel November 11th, 2003 08:12 AM

Counterfeit Euro detection
 


tim schrieb:

"Gernot Egger" wrote in message ...
Casey wrote:
Does anyone know a URL that explains the security features of
Euro notes, i.e. a webpage that explains how to spot a counterfeit
Euro note?


There was a news item yesterday telling how many dud notes
there are. There are apparently even people counterfeiting the
coins! (I suppose that give the 15 different designs and the
fact that most people will have seen few outside their own
country's you could probably pass a coin with micky mouse
on it unchallenged).

So they asked people to spot the counterfeits (on a "which of
these two is counterfeit" basis) and apparently almost no-one
got it. This surprises me, I am confident that I could tell a
counterfeit note if I was asked to look (unless it was so good
that the bank would be fooled) but TBH I doubt that I'd notice
if I got one in my change as I just don't have the time (or the
courage) to check every note that the cashier gives me.

BTW probably the best way to tell a 'real' note is to look
for the 'two-tone' ink used on the 50s and above.


I thought the 50€ was the most common forgery.

I suspect
that this is beyond the counterfeiters (or perhaps, is not cost
effective)

tim


One problem is that, because the contracts to print notes had to be
divided between all the countries for political reasons, the security
measures used in the banknotes had to be reduced to a subset that all
the printers could handle technically.

T.



http://www.euro.ecb.int/

- http://www.euro.ecb.int/en/section/recog.html

lg Gernot



Arwel Parry November 11th, 2003 12:24 PM

Counterfeit Euro detection
 
In message , Thomas Peel
writes


tim schrieb:
I suspect
that this is beyond the counterfeiters (or perhaps, is not cost
effective)

tim


One problem is that, because the contracts to print notes had to be
divided between all the countries for political reasons, the security
measures used in the banknotes had to be reduced to a subset that all
the printers could handle technically.


I don't think so -- I got the impression that they tried pretty much to
get every anti-counterfeit technique that all the countries used in
their own notes. Consider -
- the feel of the paper
- the watermark
- the watermark barcode which identifies the value of the note
- the metal strip
- the part-printing of the design on the two sides of the top corner so
you only see the whole value when it's held to the light (and requires
that the two sides be printed in perfect register)
- the ultraviolet fluorescence
- the holograms on all the notes
- the optically-varying ink on the higher values
- microprinting
- the checksum on the serial numbers

The only trick I've seen which wasn't used on the euro was printing the
serial number with variable sized numbers, as is done on Czech and some
Scottish notes.

--
Arwel Parry
http://www.cartref.demon.co.uk/

Casey November 11th, 2003 03:35 PM

Counterfeit Euro detection
 
I got the impression that they tried pretty much to get every anti-
counterfeit technique that all the countries used in their own notes.


I also think that the techniques embarrassed the USA into updating
American notes. Witness the new $20 note with colored ink for
the very first time. We'll probably never see holograms because
of the uproar from the bill changing machine companies.


Casey



Miguel Cruz November 11th, 2003 04:07 PM

Counterfeit Euro detection
 
Arwel Parry wrote:
I don't think so -- I got the impression that they tried pretty much to
get every anti-counterfeit technique that all the countries used in
their own notes.


They skipped the Dutch tactic of listing all the measures in fine print on
the note itself, so anyone could tick them off as they checked for them.

I always wondered if counterfeiters there would edit that text to excise
mention of the anti-counterfeiting measures they didn't bother to duplicate.

miguel
--
See the world from your web browser: http://travel.u.nu/


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