Technique for producing advanced and unique printing designs dramatically improves counterfeit resistance for security documents like passports, visas, birth records, and banknotes.
Sensitive documents such as banknotes, passports, visas, and birth records often contain proprietary security features to deter counterfeiters. However, these documents remain subject to fraud despite continual developments in anti-counterfeiting technologies. Adding proprietary security features to documents can increase costs, create fragile supply chains, and complicate manufacturing and quality control processes.
The suite of technologies designed by the US Department of State and US Immigration and Customs Enforcement entails methods and techniques for applying advanced design elements to sensitive documents to increase document security without requiring reliance on proprietary technology. These design strategies create a high barrier to counterfeiters and can be performed with existing high-end printing equipment and software already owned by secure document producers. DHS owns a related patent family [see Systems and Methods for Interrupting Traditional Counterfeiting Workflows] that obscure printing processes of identification documents to deter counterfeiting.
Technology Category | Border Security |
Stage of Development | Proven System |
Inventor(s) | Joel Zlotnick Jordan Brough Troy Eberhardt Tyra McConnell Elizabeth Gil Traci Moran |
US Patent Application number | US18/102,002 |
US Patent numbers | US11,850,878; US11,890,888; US12,083,814 Related DHS patent family Systems and Methods for Interrupting Traditional |
Partnerships Sought | License |
DHS Component | U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement |
Contact Information | T2C@hq.dhs.gov |
For a more detailed description download the PDF below.
Attachment | Ext. | Size | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Advanced Anti-Counterfeit Security Elements | 605.15 KB | 11/15/2024 |