The US
Federal Reserve has issued a new hi-tech $100 banknote comprising several new
security features.
It
includes a blue 3D security ribbon and a bell and inkwell logo that authorities
say are particularly difficult to replicate.
These
combine with traditional security features, such as a portrait watermark and an
embedded security thread that glows pink under ultraviolet light.
The 2010
design was delayed because of "unexpected production challenges".
The 3D
security ribbon - which is woven into the note, not printed on it - features
images of 100s that change into bells and move upwards or sideways depending on
how you tilt the paper.
Referring
to the embedded security thread Chadwick Wasilenkoff, chief executive of
security paper company Fortress Paper, told the BBC: "It's not a small
incremental step up for security, it's a giant leap."
Tilting
also reveals a green bell within a copper-coloured inkwell to the right of the
blue ribbon.
In
addition, the 100 number in the bottom right-hand corner shifts from copper to
green.
The
redesigned banknote, which features a portrait of US founding father and
scientist Benjamin Franklin, also includes raised "intaglio" printing
that gives the notes a distinctive feel, and microprinted words that are
difficult to read without magnification.
Forgeries
Over a
decade of research and development has gone into the new note, the Fed said, in
a joint project with the US Secret Service and the Department of the Treasury.
Advances
in design software and high-resolution copying and printing have made it easier
for counterfeiters to print fake money and harder for retailers to spot the
forgeries.
US
authorities say that $100 bill is the most counterfeited of all US banknotes,
but accurate figures for the total value of counterfeit cash in circulation are
hard to come by.
The US
Secret Service estimates that counterfeit bills account for less than 0.01% of
the $1.1 trillion (£683bn) of US money in circulation.
It says
about $80.7m of counterfeit currency changed hands domestically in 2012, and
about $14.5m abroad.
The
authorities seized $9.7m in counterfeit cash before it could make it in to the
US money supply, and seized $56.8m abroad in 2012.
Bruce
Schneier, security expert at BT, told the BBC: "Bills have to be easy to
produce cheaply and in large quantities by the government, yet hard to
reproduce in small quantities by counterfeiters.
"Making
something that costs less than a dollar to produce and over $100 to reproduce
is a very difficult problem."
Source:
BBC
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