Xerox Scientists Develop MicroTextâ„¢ Font; Digitally Printing Tiny Words and Numbers Will Help Make Documents More Secure
September 16th, 2006 Leave a comment Visited 13 times, 1 so far today
Xerox Scientists Develop MicroTextâ„¢ Font; Digitally Printing Tiny Words and Numbers Will Help Make Documents More Secure
Xerox Corporation (NYSE: XRX) scientists have developed a font so small that you need a magnifying glass to read the words. The new MicroTextâ„¢ Specialty Imaging Font, just 1/100th of an inch high, is designed to help make valuable documents with personal information such as birth certificates, personal identification papers, and checks even harder to forge.
Microscopic words are already hidden in the design of credit cards, checks and currency as a deterrent to counterfeiting. For instance, the “dots” in the border next to Andrew Jackson’s right shoulder on current $20 bills are really the tiny words “The United States of America 20 USA 20 USA.” Now Xerox’s innovation carries microprinting to the next level because it can make important documents more secure by individualizing the tiny letters and numbers.
Today, the signature line on some personal checks is actually the super-small words “authorized signature” written over and over on the offset-printed blank check stock. But when a digital printer is used, any element on the page – lines, text, images – can be unique to the recipient. Combine that with the new Xerox MicroText font, and your name and address could be repeated to form the signature line. Or companies and government agencies that issue checks – pay checks, rebate checks, Social Security checks, etc. — could print the amount of the check in mouse-size type as well as in a normal-size font.
“Microprinting variable information makes individualized documents – whether they are birth certificates or drivers licenses or pay checks or transcripts – even more time-consuming to replicate,” said Reiner Eschbach, a research fellow in the Xerox Innovation Group. “Adding that extra layer of security is a barrier to counterfeiters and makes the document more secure.”
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