Patents by Inventor Thomas D. Pawlik

Thomas D. Pawlik has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20140339434
    Abstract: A system for authenticating a document includes a document having a substrate comprising an optical brightener; printing a background with a ultraviolet (UV) absorbing material on the substrate comprising a first pattern of lines having a first frequency and a first orientation; printing a security mark with the UV material on the substrate comprising a second pattern of lines having a second frequency and a second orientation; a lenticular lens; placing the lenticular lens over the security mark and background; a UV lamp; illuminating the security mark and background through the lenticular lens with UV light; orienting the lenticular lens to match either the first orientation or the second orientation; and authenticating the document if the security mark matches a predetermined security mark.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 17, 2013
    Publication date: November 20, 2014
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Judith A. Bose
  • Publication number: 20140339808
    Abstract: A document with a security marker includes a substrate comprising an optical brightener; a background comprising an ultraviolet (UV) absorbing material arranged in a first pattern of lines having a first frequency and a first orientation; and a security mark comprising the UV material arranged in a second pattern of lines having a second frequency and a second orientation.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 17, 2013
    Publication date: November 20, 2014
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Judith A. Bose
  • Publication number: 20140339807
    Abstract: A method of authenticating a document includes providing a document having a substrate comprising an optical brightener; printing a background with a ultraviolet (UV) absorbing material on the substrate comprising a first pattern of lines having a first frequency and a first orientation; printing a security mark with the UV material on the substrate comprising a second pattern of lines having a second frequency or a second orientation or both; placing a lenticular lens over the security mark and background; illuminating the security mark and background through the lenticular lens with UV light; orienting the lenticular lens to match either the first orientation or the second orientation; and authenticating the document if the security mark matches a predetermined security mark.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 17, 2013
    Publication date: November 20, 2014
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Judith A. Bose
  • Publication number: 20140312116
    Abstract: A system for detecting reproduction of barcodes (12) includes providing a barcode which contains data; providing a copy-evident background (14); capturing an image of the barcode and the copy-evident background; locating and decoding the barcode; detecting copy introduced changes in the copy-evident background; and authenticating the barcode if the copy-evident background has not been copied.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 17, 2013
    Publication date: October 23, 2014
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Myra T. Olm
  • Publication number: 20140312120
    Abstract: A method for detecting reorigination of barcodes (12) includes providing a multisegment barcode which contains data; capturing an image of the multisegment barcode; locating the barcode in the image; decoding the barcode; detecting individual segments in the multisegment barcode; and authenticating the barcode if the individual segments match the original barcode.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 17, 2013
    Publication date: October 23, 2014
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Myra T. Olm
  • Publication number: 20140233861
    Abstract: A method for locating an electronic apparatus, the method includes identifying a mobile communication device that is proximate the electronic apparatus; receiving location information embedded in an image file by the mobile communication device and transferred from the mobile communication device; and storing the location information in the electronic apparatus.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 21, 2013
    Publication date: August 21, 2014
    Inventors: Siow Kiat Tan, Senthilnathan Chinnayegappan, Thomas D. Pawlik
  • Publication number: 20140211071
    Abstract: A system for authenticating an object includes a label (12) with invisible indicia (14) on the object which rotates a polarization of incident light; a digital camera (18) having a light source (20), an image sensor (22), a first polarizing filter (24) having a first orientation, and a second polarizing filter (26) having a second orientation orthogonal to the first orientation; illuminating the label with light from the light source through the first linear polarizer; forming an image with the image sensor using reflected light from the label wherein the reflected light passes through the second polarizer prior to reaching the sensor; wherein the second linear polarizer makes the invisible indicia visible; and authenticating the object.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 31, 2013
    Publication date: July 31, 2014
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Judith A. Bose, Ronald S. Cok, Nelson A. Blish
  • Publication number: 20140210998
    Abstract: A method for authenticating an object that includes providing a label (12) with invisible indicia (14) printed with optically active material on a reflective substrate; providing a device that has a digital camera (18) having a light source (20), an image sensor (22), a first polarizing filter (24) having a first orientation, and a second polarizing filter (26) having a second orientation; illuminating the label with the light from the light source through the first polarizing filter; forming an image with the image sensor using reflected light from the label wherein the reflected light passes through the second polarizing filter prior to reaching the sensor; wherein the second polarizing filter makes the invisible indicia visible; and authenticating the object.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 31, 2013
    Publication date: July 31, 2014
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Judith A. Bose, Ronald S. Cok, Nelson A. Blish
  • Patent number: 8750621
    Abstract: A method for authenticating security markers includes capturing an image of a region of interest on a product with a camera; storing image data in a two-dimensional array on a microprocessor; counting a number of pixels at or above a predetermined brightness level in the image data with the microprocessor to determine a first score; establishing an area within the image; counting a number of pixels within the area to determine a second score; calculating a ratio of the second score to the first score; and if the ratio is above a predetermined threshold the security marker is authenticated.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 27, 2011
    Date of Patent: June 10, 2014
    Assignee: Eastman Kodak Company
    Inventors: Thomas J. Widzinski, Erwin L. Allmann, Thomas D. Pawlik, Judith A. Bose, Gary M. Spinelli, Myra T. Olm
  • Publication number: 20140151445
    Abstract: A system for detecting reproduction of barcodes (12) includes providing a barcode which contains data; providing a copy-evident background (14); capturing an image of the barcode and the copy-evident background; locating and decoding the barcode; detecting copy introduced changes in the copy-evident background; and authenticating the barcode if the copy-evident background has not been copied.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 30, 2012
    Publication date: June 5, 2014
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Myra T. Olm
  • Publication number: 20140151454
    Abstract: A method for detecting reproduction of barcodes (12) includes providing a barcode which contains data; providing a copy-evident background (14); capturing an image of the barcode and the copy-evident background; locating and decoding the barcode; detecting copy introduced changes in the copy-evident background; and authenticating the barcode if the copy-evident background has not been copied.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 30, 2012
    Publication date: June 5, 2014
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Myra T. Olm
  • Patent number: 8681004
    Abstract: A method to deactivate a security measure includes applying a first covert optically active security marker to a product or document; completing a transaction for the product or document; and applying a second optically active security marker to the product or document which indicates completion of the transaction.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 27, 2011
    Date of Patent: March 25, 2014
    Assignee: Eastman Kodak Company
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Myra T. Olm, Judith A. Bose
  • Publication number: 20140048723
    Abstract: A method of enabling an authenticating device (10) includes providing an enabling target (17); measuring one or more attributes of the enabling target with the authenticating device; comparing at least one measured attribute with a predetermined expected value; enabling the authenticating device when the at least one measured attribute matches the predetermined expected value; and operating the authenticating device.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 16, 2012
    Publication date: February 20, 2014
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Myra T. Olm, Thomas J. Widzinski, Judith A. Bose, Mark P. Henry
  • Patent number: 8653445
    Abstract: A method for detecting and viewing invisible indicia includes illuminating the invisible indicia with radiation of a first wavelength with an illumination source; detecting emitted light from the invisible indicia at a second wavelength with a sensor array; eliminating reflected radiation at the first wavelength; focusing an image of the invisible indicia on the sensor array; displaying the image of the invisible indicia; spacing the sensor array at a fixed distance from the invisible indicia with a spacer; and adjusting sensitivity of the sensor array.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 11, 2011
    Date of Patent: February 18, 2014
    Assignee: Eastman Kodak Company
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Thomas J. Widzinski, Judith A. Bose, Myra T. Olm
  • Patent number: 8619245
    Abstract: A system for enabling an authenticating device includes an enabling target (17); measuring one or more attributes of the enabling target with the authenticating device; comparing at least one measured attribute with a predetermined expected value; enabling the authenticating device when the at least one measured attribute matches the predetermined expected value; and operating the authenticating device.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 16, 2012
    Date of Patent: December 31, 2013
    Assignee: Eastman Kodak Company
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Myra T. Olm, Thomas J. Widzinski, Judith A. Bose, Mark P. Henry
  • Patent number: 8588506
    Abstract: A method for detecting authorized security markers includes capturing an image of a region of interest on a product with a camera; storing image data in a two-dimensional array on a microprocessor; counting a number of pixels at or above a predetermined brightness level in the image data with the microprocessor to determine a first score; eroding the image data; counting the pixels which remain at or above the predetermined brightness level after erosion to determine a second score; calculating a ratio of the second score to the first score; and producing a first authentication signal if the ratio meets a first predetermined criteria.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 27, 2011
    Date of Patent: November 19, 2013
    Assignee: Eastman Kodak Company
    Inventors: Thomas J. Widzinski, Erwin L. Allmann, Thomas D. Pawlik, Judith A. Bose, Gary M. Spinelli, Myra T. Olm
  • Patent number: 8497924
    Abstract: An apparatus for eliminating background noise from a security marker authenticating system including a first sensor for capturing an image of a background of the security marker; a light source for illuminating the security marker; the first sensor or a second sensor or both captures a plurality images of the optical response of the security marker; a computer which averages the plurality of optical response images; the computer smoothes the background image; and the computer subtracts the smoothed background image from the average of the plurality of optical response images.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 27, 2011
    Date of Patent: July 30, 2013
    Assignee: Eastman Kodak Company
    Inventors: Thomas J. Widzinski, Thomas D. Pawlik, Erwin L. Allmann, Gary M. Spinelli, Myra T. Olm
  • Patent number: 8493479
    Abstract: A method of eliminating background noise from a system for authenticating security markers includes capturing an image of a background of the security marker; illuminating the security marker; capturing a plurality of images of the optical response of the security marker; averaging the plurality of optical response images; smoothing the background image; and subtracting the smoothed background image from the average of the plurality of optical response images.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 27, 2011
    Date of Patent: July 23, 2013
    Assignee: Eastman Kodak Company
    Inventors: Thomas J. Widzinski, Thomas D. Pawlik, Erwin L. Allmann, Gary M. Spinelli, Myra T. Olm
  • Patent number: 8469482
    Abstract: A method for determining a variance of a sensor in inkjet printers includes maintaining a printer carriage at a stationary position; illuminating a media patch of known characteristics with a light source that varies an intensity of the light between at least a first and second intensity, in which the second intensity is different from the first intensity; obtaining at least specular reflectance data from light reflected off the print media by measuring a signal from a photo-detector during the illumination; and comparing the specular data to stored values to determine a variation of the sensor response for forming a correction factor; and using the correction factor to calibrate at least a first signal of the inkjet printer.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 31, 2011
    Date of Patent: June 25, 2013
    Assignee: Eastman Kodak Company
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Mark C. Rzadca, Thomas F. Powers
  • Patent number: 8469483
    Abstract: A method for determining a variance of a sensor in inkjet printers comprising maintaining a printer carriage at a stationary position; illuminating a media patch of known characteristics with a light source that varies an intensity of the light between at least a first and second intensity, in which the second intensity is different from the first intensity; obtaining an amount of light transmitted through the media patch by measuring a signal from a photo-detector during the illumination; and comparing the amount of received light to stored target values to determine a variation of the sensor response for forming a correction factor; and using the correction factor to calibrate at least a first signal of the inkjet printer.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 31, 2011
    Date of Patent: June 25, 2013
    Assignee: Eastman Kodak Company
    Inventors: Thomas D. Pawlik, Thomas F. Powers, Mark C. Rzadca