Infrared Filter Patents (Class 283/88)
-
Patent number: 10929735Abstract: In some embodiments, a smart card may include a substrate with a first side and a second side. A first protective layer covers the first side and a second protective layer covers the second side of the substrate. Circuitry held in the substrate includes electronic interconnects for interconnecting circuitry elements. The circuitry elements include a processor, power circuitry for powering the circuitry elements, and an environmental detection sensor for respectively detecting a predetermined environmental parameter. The processor is configured to receive an output from the environmental detection sensor, to determine from the output that the environmental detection sensor detected an environmental alert trigger condition, and to generate an alert that is representative of the environmental alert trigger condition. The protective layers include pores in a region proximate to the environmental detection sensor for exposing the environmental detection sensor to an environment around the smart card.Type: GrantFiled: February 3, 2020Date of Patent: February 23, 2021Assignee: Capital One Services, LLCInventors: James Zarakas, Molly Johnson, Adam Vukich
-
Patent number: 9691011Abstract: A label including a label body having an upper surface and a bottom surface and a light-transmissive portion and an opaque portion is disclosed. The label includes an adhesive disposed on at least a portion of the bottom surface for affixing the label body to a portion of a container. An excitation-activatable material arranged to contain machine readable information is disposed on at least a portion of the upper surface of the light-transmissive portion of the label body. The machine readable information is undetected by a detector in ambient light, and detectable by the detector upon application of an excitation wavelength to the excitation-activatable material.Type: GrantFiled: January 9, 2013Date of Patent: June 27, 2017Assignee: Becton, Dickinson and CompanyInventor: Craig A. Gelfand
-
Patent number: 9104933Abstract: Devices, methods, and systems for covert bar code pattern design and decoding are described herein. One covert bar code includes detector code and decoder code. The detector code includes a combination of responsive absorptive material and responsive reflective material, and the decoder code includes a combination of responsive absorptive material and responsive reflective material.Type: GrantFiled: January 27, 2014Date of Patent: August 11, 2015Assignee: Honeywell International Inc.Inventors: Sharath Venkatesha, Kwong Wing Au
-
Patent number: 8783728Abstract: An anti-counterfeit printed matter forming an invisible image that can be visualized clearly and prevents a visible image from impeding visibility of a visualized invisible image. In the anti-counterfeit printed matter according to this invention, a plurality of object elements are arranged at a predetermined pitch in a matrix, each object element including a first and second object arranged along a first direction on both sides of a boundary at a center, opposing each other, and third and fourth objects arranged along a second direction perpendicular to the first direction on both sides of a boundary at the center, opposing each other. The first object and the second object, and the third object and the fourth object of each object element have a negative/positive relationship. The first object and/or the second object forms a first invisible image. The third object and/or the fourth object forms a second invisible image.Type: GrantFiled: May 27, 2008Date of Patent: July 22, 2014Assignee: Giesecke & Devrient GmbHInventors: Wittich Kaule, Wolfgang Rauscher, Marius Dichtl
-
Patent number: 8308197Abstract: Described is a security element for increasing the forgery-proof nature of a security document, in particular an identity card or pass, a passport or an identification card. The security element (1) has a first diffractive region (15) having an open code which is visible with a naked eye. The first diffractive region further has a concealed code which is not visible with the naked eye and which can be reconstructed from the arrangement of diffractive microregions disposed in the first region (1) and/or from the structure of the first diffractive region (1). Further described is a method of increasing the forgery-proof nature of a security document.Type: GrantFiled: September 9, 2008Date of Patent: November 13, 2012Assignee: OVD Kinegram AGInventors: John Anthony Peters, Wayne Robert Tompkin, Andreas Schilling
-
Patent number: 8080307Abstract: Pasty ink for the engraved steel die printing process, having a viscosity value above 3 Pa·s, preferably above 5 Pa·s at 40° C., and comprising an infrared absorbing material, wherein said infrared absorbing material is a transition element compound whose IR-absorption is a consequence of electronic transitions within the d-shell of transition element atoms or ions.Type: GrantFiled: November 16, 2006Date of Patent: December 20, 2011Assignee: SICPA Holding SAInventors: Marlyse Demartin Maeder, Claude-Alain Despland, Edgar Mueller, Pierre Degott
-
Patent number: 8041107Abstract: A method and apparatus for inspecting defects and attachment position of an attached OVD without any influence of a change in the pattern of the OVD due to fluttering or undulation during conveyance of the printed product. Image input means and illumination means are arranged at positions where mirror reflected light and diffracted light from the OVD have values equal to or less than a threshold value upon a binarization process by image processing means. The image processing means executes the binarization process, compares the image data with the reference image data or the image data with the reference image data and the data indicating the reference position, and determines the acceptability of at least one of the form, area, and position of the OVD attached to the base material on the basis of a comparison result.Type: GrantFiled: September 6, 2005Date of Patent: October 18, 2011Assignee: National Printing Bureau, Incorporated Administrative AgencyInventors: Hisashi Kato, Shinichi Suzuki
-
Patent number: 7934752Abstract: An image forming method is provided to attain a higher security for preventing forgery and falsification of information by using an optical diffraction structure. In a body (10) whereupon a layer is to be transferred, printing information (2) is recorded. On the body (10), a layer (20d) including a hologram and a diffraction lattice provided on an optical diffraction structure transfer sheet (20) is transferred, and an image including recorded printing information (2) and optical diffraction structures (3, 4, 5) is formed. The layer (20d) including the optical diffraction structure is transferred so that the diffraction lattice (5) to be transferred forms diffraction lattice information (5) showing a prescribed regularity in a corresponding relationship between the printing information (2).Type: GrantFiled: March 8, 2004Date of Patent: May 3, 2011Assignee: Dai Nippon Printing Co., Ltd.Inventors: Norikazu Saito, Fumihiko Mizukami, Makoto Aoyagi, Tetsuya Matsuyama, Hiroshi Funada, Tadahiro Ishida
-
Patent number: 7908661Abstract: This invention relates to an optical imaging device that includes an elongate housing. An infrared sensor arrangement is arranged in the housing and is configured to sense information printed on a page with infrared ink. The device also includes a radio frequency transceiver arranged in the housing and operatively connected to the sensor arrangement for communicating said information wirelessly. A pair of orthogonal accelerometers mounted in the housing in a plane normal to an elongate axis of the housing. The accelerometers enable the device to sense direction and speed of motion without reference to a location on the page. Also included is a controller circuit for controlling operation of the sensor arrangement, the transceiver, and the accelerometers.Type: GrantFiled: January 30, 2008Date of Patent: March 15, 2011Assignee: Silverbrook Research Pty LtdInventors: Kia Silverbrook, Paul Lapstun
-
Patent number: 7819434Abstract: A value document, in particular a bank note, has a value document substrate and at least one feature substance for authenticity recognition and at least two different feature substances for checking the value document. First and second feature substances are present on or in the value document substrate in the form of mutually independent codings which render, at least partly, the same information, e.g. statement of value, currency, etc.Type: GrantFiled: October 5, 2004Date of Patent: October 26, 2010Assignee: Giesecke & Devrient GmbHInventors: Gerhard Schwenk, Thomas Giering, Gerhard Stenzel, Wittich Kaule
-
Patent number: 7694887Abstract: The invention relates to identification documents, and in particular to providing optically variable personalized data to identification documents. In one implementation, we provide an identification document comprising a document layer and a first indicium. The document layer comprises a material capable of being printed by a thermally transferable optically variable ink. The first indicium is printed on the document layer and comprises personalized data and printed to the document layer by a thermally transferred optically variable ink. The first indicium may be printed to the document layer by disposing a thermally transferable optically variable ink in a mass transfer panel of a printer ribbon adapted for use in a dye diffusion thermal transfer printer, and printing the first indicium as part of a mass transfer printing process.Type: GrantFiled: December 23, 2004Date of Patent: April 13, 2010Assignee: L-1 Secure Credentialing, Inc.Inventors: Robert Jones, Daoshen Bi, Charles F. Duggan, Nelson T. Schneck
-
Patent number: 7654579Abstract: The invention concerns an object of value (15), for example a credit card, banknote or identity card. The object of value (15) has a carrier layer (1), at least one first layer (21) containing a moiré pattern and at least one second layer (31, 33) containing a moiré analyzer for the moiré pattern of the first layer (21). That second layer is arranged above or beneath the first layer in a fixed position relative to the first layer in such a way that the moiré pattern of the first layer (21) and the moiré analyzer of the second layer (31, 33) are permanently optically superimposed at least in region-wise fashion, whereby a permanent moiré image is generated.Type: GrantFiled: February 12, 2005Date of Patent: February 2, 2010Assignee: OVD Kinegram AGInventor: Achim Hansen
-
Patent number: 7401817Abstract: The invention relates to a security marking whose level of proof against forgery is greater than that of known security markings, comprising liquid-crystalline material with chiral phase, wherein the security marking is imperceptible to the eye and the properties of the liquid-crystalline material with chiral phase can be detected with the aid of detection systems.Type: GrantFiled: November 19, 2002Date of Patent: July 22, 2008Assignee: Sicpa Holding S.A.Inventors: Christoph Müller-Rees, Jürgen Küpfer, Horst Leigeber, Georg Schwalb
-
Publication number: 20070279697Abstract: The security element has a pattern, and in particular a Moiré pattern which contains a coded pattern or image which is made visible through a filter. The filter is arranged on a layer that is fixedly connected to a substrate, a distance of at least 0.025 mm being present between the pattern and the filter. When the security element is tilted, the pattern or the image moves continuously. The pattern is preferably a band Moiré pattern. The filter is preferably a line filter that is laser-transmissive. The pattern is preferably produced through the filter by means of a laser. The security element according to the invention is distinguished by high security against forgery and can nevertheless be produced in a comparatively cost-effective manner.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 5, 2007Publication date: December 6, 2007Applicant: TRUB AGInventors: Heidi Widmer Gomres, Stephan Hofstetter, Paul Christen
-
Patent number: 7292278Abstract: Management data for managing an image sensing device can be read from the device even after the device has been mounted. To accomplish this, the management data is recorded in a non-effective imaging zone that surrounds an effective imaging area in the read-out area of the image sensing device. The non-effective imaging zone is a zone from which an output signal is not used in generating a sensed target image. The management data can be sensed from the signal output by the image sensing device. In another aspect, management data for managing an image sensing device can be read from the device even after the device has been mounted on a circuit board. To accomplish this, the management data is recorded on a protective glass, which covers the device, using an ink that reflects infrared radiation. A target image having a uniform pattern is sensed using a light source whose emission includes infrared radiation, and the image obtained by such sensing is displayed on a display.Type: GrantFiled: June 22, 2004Date of Patent: November 6, 2007Assignee: Fujifilm CorporationInventor: Takeshi Misawa
-
Patent number: 7074478Abstract: A substrate, such as a document of value, carries a design feature (F), which includes an array of repeating patterns with the patterns exhibiting discrete differences in one or more visual characteristics, for example, shape, color or optical responses, according to a predetermined pattern. The differences are, preferably, indiscernible to the unaided eye, but can be discriminated by an optical reading machine. In an alternatively preferred embodiment, the visual characteristics of each pattern represent 8- or 16-bit information.Type: GrantFiled: June 21, 2001Date of Patent: July 11, 2006Assignee: Fryco LimitedInventor: Nigel Christopher Abraham
-
Patent number: 6805926Abstract: A security label having one or more security elements is used on or in association with items, such as consumer products, that have value and are susceptible to counterfeiting. The security label is preferably used as a primary label directly affixed to the item or product. The security element(s) can be affixed to an outer or inner label surface, embedded within the label film or paper layer and/or laminated between two or more layers. One type of security element includes a security thread having indicia formed thereon that are not easily reproduced or duplicated. Another type of security element includes a machine-readable security element that provides encoded machine-readable verification data.Type: GrantFiled: February 22, 2002Date of Patent: October 19, 2004Assignee: Technical Graphics Security Products, LLCInventors: Paul F. Cote, Stephen B. Curdo, Gerald J. Gartner, Gary R. Wolpert
-
Patent number: 6795215Abstract: A print engine/controller suited to use with a drop on demand print head. The print engine/controller works with compressed page data having both JPEG contone image layers and a bi-level image plane compressed using a Group 4 facsimile protocol. It receives compressed image plane's and effects expansion and printing in a pipeline fashion. It consists of a high speed serial interface 27 (such as a standard IEEE 1394 interface), a standard JPEG decoder 28, a standard Group 4 Fax decoder, a halftoner/compositor unit 29, a tag encoder 30 by which to place infrared tags into a printed page, a line loader/formatter unit 31 feeding an interface 32 to the print head 33. The decoders 28,88 and encoder 30 are buffered to the halftoner/compositor 29.Type: GrantFiled: May 23, 2000Date of Patent: September 21, 2004Assignee: Silverbrook Research Pty LtdInventors: Kia Silverbrook, Paul Lapstun, Simon Robert Walmsley
-
Patent number: 6764970Abstract: According to the invention the labels (22) are produced in a broad woven fabric (21) comprising ground warp yarn (4) and ground weft yarn (5) for a ground woven fabric (11), embroidery weft yarn (12) which forms a figure and code weft yarn (10) which forms a barcode, said yarn being distinguishable from the ground warp yarn only in a light outside the visible spectrum. In the broad woven fabric (21) several labels (22) are produced whose longitudinal sides (1) adjoin each other in the weft direction and remain unfolded and whose lateral sides (2) are adjacent to each other in the warp direction and can be folded. The embroidery weft yarn (12) and the code weft yarn (10) extend parallel to each other and at a distance from the longitudinal sides (1) so that the backs of the labels (22) are evenly covered and thus uniformly transparent.Type: GrantFiled: November 29, 2001Date of Patent: July 20, 2004Assignee: Textilma AGInventor: Christian Kuoni
-
Patent number: 6700613Abstract: A data-reading image capture apparatus, camera, and method of use. The capture apparatus has a digital image detector sensitive to a band of visible radiation and a band of invisible electromagnetic radiation. An optical system, in the capture apparatus, focuses the bands of electromagnetic radiation on the image detector. An image separator is disposed in the capture apparatus, in operative relation to the digital image detector and optical system. The image separator is switchable between an image capture state and a data reading state. The image separator is attenuative for the band of invisible radiation and transmissive for the band of visible radiation in the image capture state. The image separator is attenuative for the band of visible radiation and transmissive for the band of invisible radiation in the data reading state.Type: GrantFiled: June 16, 1998Date of Patent: March 2, 2004Assignee: Eastman Kodak CompanyInventors: Robert C. Bryant, David J. Nelson, Jeffrey A. Small
-
Patent number: 6337752Abstract: The invention relates to a system comprising a series of data carriers, in particular identity cards, papers of value or the like, whereby the data carriers belonging to the system exhibit diffraction structures containing standard information and parts of the series are changed by additional measures in the area of the diffraction structures or combined with other elements and they differ from the rest of the series in optically recognizable fashion, whereby the change in the diffraction structures and/or the combination with other elements convey an esthetic overall impression and the change and/or combination with the other elements cannot be undone without destruction of the diffraction structures.Type: GrantFiled: February 13, 1998Date of Patent: January 8, 2002Assignee: GAO Gesellschaft für Automation und Organisation mbHInventors: Christoph Heckenkamp, Wittich Kaule, Gerhard Stenzel
-
Patent number: 6280891Abstract: Methods and adhesive labels useful in marking products or documents by applying these to substrates. A mark such as a barcode, photograph or characters are formed directly on the substrate and the adhesive label is applied over it. The adhesive label includes a concealing film layer which is transparent to a first wavelength outside the visible region, a diffractive optical mark with a transparent reflective layer and an adhesive layer. The first wavelength may be infrared allowing the underlying mark to be read by an IR laser. The adhesive labels are formed as to allow them to be continuously separated from a temporary detachment layer, thereby exposing the adhesive layer, and affixed to the document.Type: GrantFiled: August 4, 1998Date of Patent: August 28, 2001Assignee: Hologram Industries S.A.Inventors: Francoise Daniel, Hugues Souparis
-
Publication number: 20010005570Abstract: A method for marking articles or documents by placing on a substrate (1) a multi-layer optical complex consisting of an identifying portion (2, 7) such as bar codes, a photograph or characters, and an authenticating portion consisting of a diffracting optical mark, said portions being arranged one on top of the other in such a way that they cannot be separated without destroying the authenticating portion. A protected document is also disclosed which comprises an indivisible stack consisting of a printed portion (2, 7) forming an identifier read by reflection in a first wavelength band, and coated with a lacquer (5) that is opaque in the visible spectrum and has a transmission window including said first wavelength band, as well as a transparent reflective layer (4) forming a diffracting optical mark. A marking system for carrying out the method, and a device for checking said article or document, are also disclosed.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 4, 1998Publication date: June 28, 2001Applicant: Francoise DanielInventors: FRANCOISE DANIEL, HUGUES SOUPARIS
-
Patent number: 6203069Abstract: A product authentication system and method employs a unique mark that is simple and cost-effective to apply and read, but provides several layers of protection, including anti-counterfeit and anti-diversion, against counterfeiters. The unique mark includes a bar code that is printed in invisible ink comprising a UV or near-IR ink and an IR mark. The first layer of protection is invisibility. The second layer of protection is the bar code itself. The third layer of protection is the presence of the IR mark in the unique mark. The fourth layer of protection is the IR emitting characteristics of the IR mark.Type: GrantFiled: October 15, 1999Date of Patent: March 20, 2001Assignee: DNA Technologies Inc.Inventors: Chris Outwater, Robert Loop
-
Patent number: 6127050Abstract: An archival medium, such as a compact disc, is made of a metal such as aluminum which is mechanically gained with particulate material under conditions that embed particulate material into the surface of the medium and visibly imageable by selective exposure to infrared laser radiation. A mechanically grained aluminum medium can also be anodically oxidized under conditions that do not impair the ability of the substrate to be laser imaged. The archival medium can be coated with opaque and transparent polymer coatings before or after imaging for security and/or protection. The coating can be a laser ablatable coating to provide a tamper-proof medium.Type: GrantFiled: May 15, 1998Date of Patent: October 3, 2000Inventors: Howard A. Fromson, William J. Rozell
-
Patent number: 6086966Abstract: A method for authenticating a textile product, wherein a colorless composition is applied to at least one portion of at least one thread of the textile product. The composition comprises one of a pair of a colorformer and an activator which react when mixed to produce a spectral response. The textile product is authenticated as genuine by applying the other of the pair of the colorformer and activator to at least one portion of the at least one thread to produce the spectral response. The textile product may be a thread or a woven label.Type: GrantFiled: March 1, 1999Date of Patent: July 11, 2000Assignee: Nocopi Technologies, Inc.Inventors: Arshavir Gundjian, Abraham Kuruvilla
-
Patent number: 5856048Abstract: The invention is directed to an information-recorded medium with easily selectable and identifiable items of information, which is virtually protected against forgery and has enhanced security against some improper use, and a method for reading such a medium. This information-recorded medium 1 includes a substrate 2 and a layer 3 with information recorded thereon by the printing of infrared absorbing ink, said layer 3 being provided on the surface of the layer 2. The printed layer 3 is provided thereon with a relief hologram-recorded layer 7 through an adhesive layer 4, said hologram-recorded layer 7 being built up of a reflecting layer 5 transparent to the infrared region and a relief hologram-formed layer 6 provided on the surface of the reflecting layer 5. For reading, the hologram-recorded layer 7 is reconstructed by visible light, while the printed layer is reconstructed by infrared light, and the medium 1 is identified on the basis of the thus reconstructed information.Type: GrantFiled: July 26, 1993Date of Patent: January 5, 1999Assignee: Dai Nippon Printing Co., Ltd.Inventors: Shigehiko Tahara, Shinichi Kurokawa, Norio Takahashi, Ryuji Horiguchi, Morito Sakai, Akira Hayakawa, Shinpei Komaki
-
Patent number: 5766324Abstract: A printed matter having substrate, and a datum printed with an infrared fluorescent which is excited by infrared light and emits light in an infrared wavelength range and a datum printed with a black colorant does not absorb light in the infrared wavelength range, or data printed with a black colorant which does not absorb light in the infrared wavelength range and carries thereon an organic material which is excited by infrared light and emits light in an infrared wavelength range, whereby an amount of data printed in a unit area of the substrate is increased.Type: GrantFiled: December 28, 1995Date of Patent: June 16, 1998Assignee: Hitachi Maxell, Ltd.Inventors: Masahito Ikegaya, Takanori Kamoto, Yoshinori Yamamoto
-
Patent number: 5740514Abstract: An information carrying sheet of securities, identification cards and the like which is provided with an illegal copying preventive image pattern in which the existence of an illegal copying preventive image pattern is hardly discriminated by the naked eye. An illegal copying preventive image pattern which prevents an unnecessary exposure by combining a plurality of patterns having an absorption in different regions used in the sheet and incorporating a dummy pattern, and which is difficult to perform falsifying/altering/counterfeiting action; and an ink composition which is used for the image pattern, and has a high IR absorption. Whether copying is acceptable or not can be promptly judged with a less memory capacity to shorten copying processing time, and falsifying/altering/counterfeiting action can be securely prevented in such a manner that the application of an illegal copying preventive processing is not noticed easily by a third party.Type: GrantFiled: August 24, 1995Date of Patent: April 14, 1998Assignee: Toppan Printing Co., Ltd.Inventor: Nagahisa Natsudaira
-
Patent number: 5602939Abstract: The present invention provides an invisible light image detecting means for detecting an invisible light region image formed by using colorless paint in an invisible light region, and a discriminating means for discriminating a general document from a specific one by using the image data detected by said invisible light image detecting means, thus discrimination between a general document and a specific one being executed accurately and without fail.Type: GrantFiled: September 26, 1994Date of Patent: February 11, 1997Assignee: Richo Company, Ltd.Inventors: Tadato Hashiguchi, Takeshi Ukai
-
Patent number: 5522623Abstract: An apparently conventional document such as an identification (ID) card is constructed as a laminate within which is a code or other coding indicia such as a photograph, bar code or fingerprint. concealed from human view. The document is read by a conventional electro-optic reader means placed against a face of the card, if the reader uses a beam of light in the wavelength absorbed by the material with which the coded indicia is produced, but reflected by the background against which the coded indicia is "seen" by the beam. The card is preferably a laminate of at least an upper lamina and a lower lamina, each made of a synthetic resin which has a substantially white imprintable surface conventionally printed with the identification of the owner of the card with a pigment-free, non-aqueous ink which is visible to the human eye but substantially transparent to wavelengths outside the visible range.Type: GrantFiled: June 7, 1995Date of Patent: June 4, 1996Assignee: Technical Systems Corp.Inventors: Jack A. Soules, Bryan D. Carpenter
-
Patent number: 5410142Abstract: An optical card having visible data marked on a base layer and a substantially transparent optical data recording layer formed over the base layer. A protective layer is laminated over the optical data recording layer. The visible data marked on the base may be marked in an ink visible only at a nonvisual wavelength, such as infrared. A reader scans the visible data marked on the base layer, since the optical recording layer covering the base layer is substantially transparent.Type: GrantFiled: March 10, 1993Date of Patent: April 25, 1995Assignee: Omron CorporationInventors: Kazuo Tsuboi, Koji Iguchi
-
Patent number: 5366252Abstract: An infrared-absorbing mark printed matter in which an infrared-absorbing mark is formed on a substrate by printing with an ink having high light absorptivity in the infrared region; the infrared-absorbing mark is covered up by smearing with an ink having high light absorptivity in the visible region and pervious to light in the infrared region to form a colored concealing layer; and on the colored concealing layer is formed a white concealing layer by printing with an ink containing a white pigment and an extender pigment of which at least part of the particles are those having an average particle size of 3 to 20 .mu.m.Type: GrantFiled: January 14, 1993Date of Patent: November 22, 1994Assignee: Hitachi Maxell, Ltd.Inventors: Masato Nishida, Toshio Oshima, Tsunemi Ohiwa, Takato Karashima
-
Patent number: 5259907Abstract: An apparently conventional playing card is invisibly coded so that it can only be read face down, by an electrooptic reading means. The card may be of non-laminated conventional card stock which has a substantially white surface conventionally printed with the identification of the suit and value of the card with inks chosen because they are visible but substantially transparent to wavelengths outside the visible range. The face of the card is coded with indicia inklessly marked across its surface with a compound which absorbs wavelengths (outside the visible range) which wavelengths are used by the reading means to read the indicia. The indicia, invisible to the human eye, correspond to a code which uniquely identifies the card. The card may be laminated from top and base sheets and the code concealed behind the front printed face of the top sheet. The upper surface of the top sheet is imprinted with the face value of the card with the inks described.Type: GrantFiled: December 1, 1992Date of Patent: November 9, 1993Assignee: Technical Systems Corp.Inventors: Jack A. Soules, Bryan D. Carpenter
-
Patent number: 5231276Abstract: This card type recording medium has plural types of inks which normally exhibit the same color visually but exhibit different optical characteristics under a predetermined condition provided in blocks in a desired pattern and, by breaking the blocks block by block in accordance with the used amount or other factor, is capable of recording information corresponding to the breakage state of the blocks. First information can be recorded by a pattern of arrangement of these plural types of inks and second information can be recorded in accordance with the breakage state of the blocks. The first information is a collation pattern which indicates that the card type recording medium is a genuine one. Since the plural types of inks exhibit the same color visually, it cannot be visually discerned which type of ink is used on which block, which makes it difficult to counterfeit the card by imitating this collation pattern.Type: GrantFiled: October 26, 1990Date of Patent: July 27, 1993Assignee: Nippon Conlux Co., Ltd.Inventor: Kenzou Yoshihara
-
Patent number: 5169155Abstract: An apparently conventional playing card is invisibly coded so that it can only be read face down, by an electro-optic reading means. The card may be of non-laminated conventional card stock which has a substantially white surface conventionally printed with the identification of the suit and value of the card with inks chosen because they are visible but substantially transparent to wavelengths outside the visible range. The face of the card is coded with indicia inklessly marked across its surface with a compound which absorbs wavelengths (outside the visible range) which wavelengths are used by the reading means to read the indicia. The indicia, invisible to the human eye, correspond to a code which uniquely identifies the card. The card may be laminated from top and base sheets and the code concealed behind the front printed face of the top sheet. The upper surface of the top sheet is imprinted with the face value of the card with the inks described.Type: GrantFiled: November 25, 1991Date of Patent: December 8, 1992Assignee: Technical Systems Corp.Inventors: Jack A. Soules, Bryan D. Carpenter
-
Patent number: 4921280Abstract: The invention relates to security fibers and other allied materials made luminescent by a dyeing process employing rare-earth compounds and their applications in fiduciary documents and other materials requiring authentication.Type: GrantFiled: June 13, 1989Date of Patent: May 1, 1990Inventor: Michel Jalon
-
Patent number: 4889367Abstract: A multi-readable information system includes a substrate material and one type of printed information that is readable by a first entity, such as information in machine readable bar code that is printed on an area of the substrate material. A different type of printed information occupies the same field area of the substrate material, such as information in human-readable symbology that is printed in at least a portion of the area occupied by the bar code. The bar code is printed in a first ink that can be read utilizing energy of a first wavelength and the human-readable symbols are printed in a second ink that can be read in a humanly visible wavelength. The humanly visible ink absorbs insufficient energy in the first wavelength to prevent reading of the bar code by a bar code-reading machine and the bar code does not interfere with the readability of the human-readable symbols.Type: GrantFiled: October 7, 1988Date of Patent: December 26, 1989Assignee: Frito-Lay, Inc.Inventor: L. Michael Miller
-
Patent number: 4889365Abstract: A counterfeit resistant label for goods is manufactured by selecting a code word from a plurality of possible code words to identify a particular label and desired information relative to the goods with which the label is to be associated, applying the code word as a series of marks in several but less than all of a plurality of predetermined locations on the face of the label using an ink that is sensitive to light in the nonvisible spectrum, and masking the visibility of the ink in light in the visible spectrum over substantially all of the predetermined locations.Type: GrantFiled: April 11, 1988Date of Patent: December 26, 1989Assignee: The Label PrintersInventor: Gerald A. Chouinard
-
Patent number: 4869532Abstract: A print is produced by printing or coating an infrared reflective coloring agent and another printing ink containing an infrared absorptive coloring agent in combination on a base material. The print therefore contains visually-recognizable information along with other information which is recognizable by infrared rays.Type: GrantFiled: September 29, 1987Date of Patent: September 26, 1989Assignee: Dainichiseika Color & Chemicals Mfg. Co., Ltd.Inventors: Yoshio Abe, Shojiro Horiguchi, Shozo Ohira, Michiei Nakamura, Masaru Hasegawa, Kimihide Kawamura, Kazuo Kanou, Katsuhiko Kitabayashi, Yoshiyuki Zama, Shiro Yamamiya
-
Patent number: 4795906Abstract: A method and apparatus for the non-destructive identification of coated and uncoated metal parts employing infrared thermography. The apparatus comprises a means for directing infrared radiation onto the surface of a part; a means for scanning the part surface for reflected infrared radiation; a means for capturing the reflected radiation and converting it into a signal representative of variations in radiation reflected from the surface of the part; means for etching an identifying code into the surface of the part; and means for displaying the signal as a video image. The method comprises altering the surface reflective characteristics of a part to produce an identifying code, irradiating the part with infrared radiation of a specific wavelength and detecting differences in the amount and intensity of radiation reflected from the part.Type: GrantFiled: September 2, 1987Date of Patent: January 3, 1989Assignee: Lockheed CorporationInventors: Mark J. Adams, Elton M. Crisman, Jr., Asrar A. Khan
-
Patent number: 4627819Abstract: A printed substrate has areas printed in a screen of carbon black ink dots and other areas printed in a corresponding screen of infrared transparent ink dots, whereby, the presence of the carbon black ink dots is made visually undetectable but can readily be detected by an infrared emitter and detector.Type: GrantFiled: October 31, 1985Date of Patent: December 9, 1986Assignee: Price/Stern/Sloan Publishers, Inc.Inventor: Roger I. Burrows
-
Patent number: 4604065Abstract: Teaching or amusement apparatus consists of a substrate bearing printed intelligence and a detector pen or unit for use therewith. The detector pen discriminates between areas on the printed substrate by means not visible to the naked eye e.g. by a difference in magnetic properties, infrared reflective properties or capacitative properties of different parts of the printing. Depending on the type of printing and the degree of complexity of detection, a wide variety of games and teaching aids may be produced using this basic approach. A typical example is a quiz game where a question may be followed by five printed answers, only one of which is correct, that correct one being printed in a detectably different way from the others.Type: GrantFiled: January 23, 1985Date of Patent: August 5, 1986Assignee: Price/Stern/Sloan Publishers, Inc.Inventors: Stephen O. Frazer, Martin P. Riddiford
-
Patent number: 4583766Abstract: An improved security badge is provided for use with an infrared badge reader. The badge is formed from a plurality of layers of PVC film which are laminated under appropriate conditions of heat and pressure to form an integral member. An infrared blocking material is disposed intermediate two of the layers. The non-blocking portions of the badge transmit between 0.90% and 1.25% infrared light.Type: GrantFiled: May 8, 1984Date of Patent: April 22, 1986Assignee: Kenneth R. WesselInventor: Kenneth R. Wessel