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Uncategorized Wednesday, April 21st 2010 at 12:42 pm

New $100 Bill Unveiled with Anti-Counterfeit Technology [Pictures]

The U.S. government has just unveiled a new $100 bill, primarily as a means of combatting increasingly tech-savvy counterfeiters. The bill’s redesign is said to be particularly focused on the threat of the virtually undetectable “Superdollar” counterfeit, publicized in Rush Hour 2 and elsewhere, which the new hundred-dollar bill will set back with sophisticated technologies like a 3D security ribbon and a color-changing Liberty Bell, in addition to the “portrait watermark of Benjamin Franklin, the security thread, and the color-shifting numeral 100″ present in the current $100 bill.

From the press release:

The redesigned $100 note includes two new advanced counterfeit-deterrent security features, in addition to effective security features from the previous design. The features are easy for consumers and merchants to check when verifying authenticity.

The blue 3-D Security Ribbon on the front of the new $100 note contains images of bells and 100sthat move and change from one to the other as you tilt the note. The Bell in the Inkwell on the front of the note is another new security feature. The bell changes color from copper to green when the note is tilted, an effect that makes it seem to appear and disappear within the copper inkwell.

“The new security features announced today come after more than a decade of research and development to protect our currency from counterfeiting. To ensure a seamless introduction of the new $100 note into the financial system, we will continue global public education of retailers, financial institutions and industry organizations to ensure that consumers and merchants are aware of the new security features,” said Treasurer of the United States Rosie Rios.

And here’s the back of the new $100 bill:

The Treasury Department has also made a YouTube video heralding the new bill (complete with soaring triumphal music):

There’s even a new $100 bill Flash simulator that lets you play around with the note, flip it around, and simulate what it’ll look like under differing light conditions: Yes, actually.

(NewMoney.gov via @Slate)

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  • http://twitter.com/cargocultpants Jonah Bliss

    dollar dollar bill, y’all

  • Susana Polo

    “Know its real.” ಠ_ಠ

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_GHDRFH27SW2NSHKS5VNKVFIVJA J

    Talking about benjamins…

    The First Lady Michelle Obama Requires
    More Than Twenty Attendants (Thats 22 Attendants to be exact)

    1. $172,200- Sher,
    Susan (Chief Of Staff)
    2. $140,000- Frye, Jocelyn C.
    (Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of Policy And Projects For The
    First Lady)
    3. $113,000- Rogers, Desiree G.
    (Special Assistant to the President and White House Social Secretary)
    4. $102,000- Johnston, Camille Y.
    (Special Assistant to the President and Director of Communications for the
    First Lady)
    5. $100,000- Winter, Melissa E.
    (Special Assistant to the President and Deputy Chief Of Staff to the First
    Lady)
    6. $90,000- Medina , David S.
    (Deputy Chief Of Staff to the First Lady)
    7. $84,000- Lelyveld, Catherine M.
    (Director and Press Secretary to the First Lady)
    8. $75,000- Starkey, Frances M.
    (Director of Scheduling and Advance for the First Lady)
    9. $70,000- Sanders, Trooper (Deputy
    Director of Policy and Projects for the First Lady)
    10. $65,000- Burnough, Erinn J.
    (Deputy Director and Deputy Social Secretary)
    11. $64,000- Reinstein, Joseph B.
    (Deputy Director and Deputy Social Secretary)
    12. $62,000- Goodman, Jennifer
    R. (Deputy Director of Scheduling and Events Coordinator For The First Lady)
    13. $60,000- Fitts, Alan O.
    (Deputy Director of Advance and Trip Director for the First Lady)
    14. $57,500- Lewis, Dana M.
    (Special Assistant and Personal Aide to the First Lady)
    15. $52,500- Mustaphi, Semonti M.
    (Associate Director and Deputy Press Secretary to The First Lady)
    16. $50,000- Jarvis, Kristen E.
    (Special-2Assistant for Scheduling and Traveling Aide to The First Lady)
    17. $45,000- Lechtenberg, Tyler A.
    (Associate Director of Correspondence For The First Lady)
    18. $43,000- Tubman, Samantha
    (Deputy Associate Director, Social Office)
    19. $40,000- Boswell, Joseph J.
    (Executive Assistant to the Chief Of Staff to the First Lady)
    20. $36,000- Armbruster, Sally M.
    (Staff Assistant to the Social Secretary)
    21. $35,000- Bookey, Natalie
    (Staff Assistant)
    22. $35,000- Jackson, Deilia A.
    (Deputy Associate Director of Correspondence for the First Lady)

    (This is community organizing
    at it’s finest.)

    There has NEVER been ANY other 1st Lady at any time who has
    created such an army of staffers whose sole duties are the facilitation of the
    First Lady’s social life. One wonders why she needs so much help, at taxpayer
    expense,when even Hillary, only had three; Jackie Kennedy one; Laura Bush one;
    and prior to Mamie Eisenhower social help came from the President’s own pocket.

    Note:This does not include makeup artist Ingrid Grimes-Miles, 49, and
    “First Hairstylist” Johnny Wright, 31, both of whom traveled aboard
    Air Force One to Europe.

  • Anonymous

    I would only want 6 if I became First Man, and they all better know how to play Texas Hold’em.

  • Ian Vandenhazel

    I think that some of those do not just go to the first lady, but i do see the point.