Patents by Inventor Donald G. MacKay

Donald G. MacKay 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: 20120080525
    Abstract: The present invention includes apparatus and methods for printing and verifying postage stamps on demand via a personal postage stamp printer. The indicium by which the stamp is printed includes a color stripe and a data field including authentication data that corresponds to the color stripe. To authenticate the stamp, the authentication data in the data field is read and compared with authentication data extracted from the color stripe.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 28, 2011
    Publication date: April 5, 2012
    Applicant: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Robert A. Cordery, Donald G. Mackay, Claude Zeller
  • Patent number: 8041645
    Abstract: The present invention includes apparatus and methods for printing and verifying postage stamps on demand via a personal postage stamp printer. The indicium by which the stamp is printed includes a color stripe and a data field including authentication data that corresponds to the color stripe. To authenticate the stamp, the authentication data in the data field is read and compared with authentication data extracted from the color stripe.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 17, 2004
    Date of Patent: October 18, 2011
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Robert A. Cordery, Donald G. Mackay, Claude Zeller
  • Patent number: 7959186
    Abstract: A signaling label for use in postage payment evidencing is described including a luminescent signaling section having a primarily green fluorescent ink coating. In one configuration, a primarily green fluorescent ink includes approximately 12 weight percent of a pigment selected from the quinazolinone class of pigments mixed with an acrylic varnish base to provide a primarily green fluorescent signal having with sufficient red fluorescent response to a short UV excitation to trigger a USPS facing system is described.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 30, 2006
    Date of Patent: June 14, 2011
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Jay Reichelsheimer, Donald G. Mackay, Richard A. Bernard
  • Patent number: 7867590
    Abstract: A label including a main section forming a blank label section and including a fluorescent signal section on the blank label section. The label is adapted to have an indicium subsequently printed on the blank label section by a printing device without the fluorescent signal section substantially interfering with reading of the indicium on the label.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 22, 2004
    Date of Patent: January 11, 2011
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Richard A. Bernhard, Judith D. Auslander, Donald G. Mackay, Jay Reichelsheimer
  • Patent number: 7733530
    Abstract: A printing system for printing both secure value documents and non-secure documents while ensuring that fraudulent copies of secure value documents printed by the printing system can be detected is provided. The printing system determines if the source is a secure or non-secure source. If the source of the image is a secure source, it will print the image, including any graphic security features. If the source is a non-secure source, before printing the image a filter is applied to the image data to remove any graphic security features included in the received image and/or the printing system will not add any graphic security features to the received image to ensure that the printed image will not contain any copy detection graphic security features.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 17, 2008
    Date of Patent: June 8, 2010
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Frederick W. Ryan, Jr., Robert A. Cordery, Donald G. Mackay
  • Publication number: 20090091800
    Abstract: A printing system for printing both secure value documents and non-secure documents while ensuring that fraudulent copies of secure value documents printed by the printing system can be detected is provided. The printing system determines if the source is a secure or non-secure source. If the source of the image is a secure source, it will print the image, including any graphic security features. If the source is a non-secure source, before printing the image a filter is applied to the image data to remove any graphic security features included in the received image and/or the printing system will not add any graphic security features to the received image to ensure that the printed image will not contain any copy detection graphic security features.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 17, 2008
    Publication date: April 9, 2009
    Applicant: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Frederick W. Ryan, JR., Robert A. Cordery, Donald G. Mackay
  • Patent number: 7483175
    Abstract: A printing system for printing both secure value documents and non-secure documents while ensuring that fraudulent copies of secure value documents printed by the printing system can be detected is provided. The printing system determines if the source is a secure or non-secure source. If the source of the image is a secure source, it will print the image, including any graphic security features. If the source is a non-secure source, before printing the image a filter is applied to the image data to remove any graphic security features included in the received image and/or the printing system will not add any graphic security features to the received image to ensure that the printed image will not contain any copy detection graphic security features.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 16, 2005
    Date of Patent: January 27, 2009
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Frederick W. Ryan, Jr., Robert A. Cordery, Donald G. Mackay
  • Patent number: 7389238
    Abstract: A method that enables the recipient to receive notification of the letter mail, flats and/or packages (mail) that the recipient is going to receive prior to the delivery of the mail. The recipient is then able to inform a post or courier e.g., Federal Express®, Airborne®, United Parcel Service®, DHL®, etc. of the manner in which the recipient would like the mail delivered. The post and courier hereinafter will be referred to as “carrier”. For instance, the recipient may want the mail physically delivered to their house faster or slower, or the mail physically redirected to the recipient's temporary address, or physically delivered to the recipient's agent, or physically delivered to the recipient's attorney, or physically returned to the mailer, or have the carrier open the physical mail and have the post e-mail or fax the contents of the envelope to the recipient and/or parties designated by the recipient.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 27, 2001
    Date of Patent: June 17, 2008
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Ronald P. Sansone, Robert A. Cordery, Donald G. Mackay
  • Publication number: 20080001392
    Abstract: A signaling label for use in postage payment evidencing is described including a luminescent signaling section having a primarily green fluorescent ink coating. In one configuration, a primarily green fluorescent ink includes approximately 12 weight percent of a pigment selected from the quinazolinone class of pigments mixed with an acrylic varnish base to provide a primarily green fluorescent signal having with sufficient red fluorescent response to a short UV excitation to trigger a USPS facing system is described.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 30, 2006
    Publication date: January 3, 2008
    Inventors: Jay Reichelsheimer, Donald G. Mackay, Richard A. Bernard
  • Patent number: 7229025
    Abstract: A printed barcode including first basic barcode information stored in a first basic mode of printed data storage, and second additional enhanced barcode information stored in a second enhanced mode of printed data storage. The second information is printed, at least partially, as a component of the first information. The first information is adapted to be read by a basic barcode reader. The second information is adapted to be read by an enhanced barcode reader and cannot be read by the basic barcode reader.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 7, 2004
    Date of Patent: June 12, 2007
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: John W. Sussmeier, Judith D. Auslander, Donald G. MacKay, Andrei Obrea, Douglas B. Quine
  • Patent number: 7191336
    Abstract: A method for producing a background image representing data. The background image is created by; producing a first encoding of data into a first binary array; producing a second encoding of the data into a second binary array; representing the first binary array as a first set of modules of a first size of n×n pixels wherein each pixel is either white or black and every pixel in the module is identical to every other picture in the module on nodes of a first lattice, representing the second binary array as a first set of modules of a second size, of m×m wherein each pixel is either white or black and every pixel in the module is identical to every other pixel in the module, which is smaller than the first size on nodes of a second lattice, combining the first and second sets of modules; and printing the first and second sets of modules.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 1, 2002
    Date of Patent: March 13, 2007
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Claude Zeller, Robert A. Cordery, Donald G. Mackay, William A. Brosseau
  • Patent number: 7113198
    Abstract: A method and system for thermal printing of secure documents. A contact thermal printing system includes: a) thermal print head having at least one heater element; and b) a thermal printer controller. The printer controller is programmed to: 1) move the print head in a predetermined pattern while the print head is in contact with a top coating of a thermal print medium; 2) overdrive the heater element during predetermined parts of the pattern to a temperature sufficient to soften or melt the top coating, thereby forming a pattern of striations in the top coating; and 3) control the heater element to print at least part of an image on the medium. The contact surface of the print head can have a specific pattern of features for forming the striations, whereby a pattern of striations formed can encode information both in the direction of the motion of the print head and transversely to the direction of motion. The pattern of striations can form a bar code.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 8, 2004
    Date of Patent: September 26, 2006
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Donald G. MacKay, Benjamin Singer, Frederick W. Ryan, Jr.
  • Patent number: 7085811
    Abstract: A method that enables the recipient to receive notification of the letters, flats and/or packages (mail) that the recipient is going to receive prior to the delivery of the mail. The recipient is then able to inform a post or courier, e.g., Federal Express®, Airborne®, United Parcel Service®, DHL®, etc., of the manner in which the recipient would like the mail delivered if the sender elects to permit the recipient to divert the mail. The post and courier hereinafter will be referred to as “carrier”. For instance, the recipient may want the mail physically delivered to their house faster or slower, or the mail physically redirected to the recipient's temporary address, or physically delivered to the recipient's agent, or physically delivered to the recipient's attorney, or physically returned to the mailer, or have the carrier open the physical mail and have the post e-mail or fax the contents of the envelope to the recipient and/or parties designated by the recipient.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 27, 2001
    Date of Patent: August 1, 2006
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Ronald P. Sansone, Robert A. Cordery, Donald G. Mackay
  • Patent number: 7055746
    Abstract: The present invention includes apparatus and methods for printing and verifying postage stamps on demand via a personal postage stamp printer. The indicia by which the stamp is printed includes a color bar sequence and a data field including data that corresponds to the color bar sequence. To authenticate the stamp, the data field is read and the color bar sequence data included in the data field is compared with the data generated by detecting the color bar sequence itself.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 7, 2004
    Date of Patent: June 6, 2006
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Donald G. MacKay, Claude Zeller, Robert A. Cordery
  • Patent number: 7054461
    Abstract: The disclosure describes an authentication system and related methods for authenticating printed objects. The system uses an information-based metric along with one or more print quality metrics to provide accurate detection or classification of a counterfeit printed object. The print quality metric evaluates attributes of a subject image associated with the original printer, ink or paper to detect degradation of those operations due to copying operations like an image scanning and halftone printing subsequent to the original printing of the object. The information-based metric measures message symbol errors in an optically readable code, such as a digital watermark.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 15, 2002
    Date of Patent: May 30, 2006
    Assignees: Pitney Bowes Inc., Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Claude Zeller, Donald G. Mackay, William Kilmartin, Robert A. Cordery, William A. Brosseau, Hugh L. Brunk, Stephen K. Decker, Jun Tian
  • Patent number: 7013024
    Abstract: A method for detecting a copy of a composite image that includes a first image and a second image that has information embedded in the second image that will change in appearance when the first and second images are scanned or photocopied. The foregoing is accomplished by scanning the first and second images, and detecting a change in appearance of the second image that indicates the first and second images were scanned or photocopied.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 1, 2002
    Date of Patent: March 14, 2006
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Robert A. Cordery, Claude Zeller, Donald G. MacKay, William A. Brosseau
  • Publication number: 20040094615
    Abstract: A method that enables a receiver or receiver's agent (hereinafter “recipient”) to obtain notification of the letters, flats and/or packages (mail) that the recipient is going to receive prior to the delivery of the mail. The recipient is then able to inform a post or courier, e.g., Federal Express®, Airborne,® United Parcel Service®, DHL®, etc., of the manner in which the recipient would like the mail delivered. The post and courier, hereinafter, will be referred to as “carrier”. For instance, the recipient may want the mail physically redirected to the recipient's temporary address, or physically delivered to the recipient's agent, or physically delivered to the recipient's attorney, or physically returned to the mailer.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 7, 2003
    Publication date: May 20, 2004
    Applicant: Pitney Bowes Incorporated
    Inventors: Ronald P. Sansone, Robert A. Cordery, Donald G. MacKay, John W. Sussmeier, Kevin W. Bodie, Frederick W. Ryan,, Douglas B. Quine
  • Patent number: 6612684
    Abstract: The number of dots per inch or resolution may be specified within a image on a document or within a postal indicia and later checked to determine if the image or document or the postal indicia has the correct resolution. The foregoing is accomplished by specifying that the image on the substrate will be printed with n plus m dots per inch; rotating a ink jet head having n nozzles per inch about a axis parallel to a substrate by an angle &thgr; so that the ink jet head will produce an image on the substrate having (n/cos &thgr;) dots per inch; storing in a data center that the specified image will be printed with (n/cos &thgr;) dots per inch; analyzing the image to determine if the image has (n/cos &thgr;) dots per inch; and comparing the number of dots per inch in the analyzed image with the number of dots per inch stored for the specified image to determine if they have the same number of dots per inch.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 14, 2001
    Date of Patent: September 2, 2003
    Assignee: Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Donald G. Mackay, Claude Zeller, Robert A. Cordery
  • Publication number: 20030156733
    Abstract: The disclosure describes an authentication system and related methods for authenticating printed objects. The system uses an information-based metric along with one or more print quality metrics to provide accurate detection or classification of a counterfeit printed object. The print quality metric evaluates attributes of a subject image associated with the original printer, ink or paper to detect degradation of those operations due to copying operations like an image scanning and halftone printing subsequent to the original printing of the object. The information-based metric measures message symbol errors in an optically readable code, such as a digital watermark.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 15, 2002
    Publication date: August 21, 2003
    Applicant: Digimarc Corporation and Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Claude Zeller, Donald G. Mackay, William Kilmartin, Robert A. Cordery, William A. Brosseau, Hugh L. Brunk, Stephen K. Decker, Jun Tian
  • Patent number: RE45828
    Abstract: A method for assigning unique printer resolutions or signatures, i.e., a unique number of dots per inch, to a class, or models of printers or lines of postage meters. The number of dots per inch or resolution may be specified within a image on a document or within a postal indicia and later checked to determine if the image on document or the postal indicia has the correct resolution. The foregoing would be able to detect an image or postal indicia that was scanned into a computer and printed with a printer that did not have the number of dots per inch specified in the image or postal indicia.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 17, 2005
    Date of Patent: December 29, 2015
    Assignees: Digimarc Corporation, Pitney Bowes Inc.
    Inventors: Donald G. Mackay, Claude Zeller, Robert A. Cordery, Hugh L. Brunk