Printing and scanning change what you intended to print. This matters in variable data security printing, since there is information encoded there. My friend and colleague Marie Vans explores this issue in another NIP25 paper posted here: http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/2009/HPL-2009-318.html The approach...
It's September. The month when most people's gas bills hit rock bottom. Kids are back in school, harvest is still just sweat and fury in the future. Closed are the pools, open are the schools, and life is good. Too good. So, those wonderful conference organizers have nothing better to do than...
Security printing professionals may be interested in submitting to the IS&T/ISJ sponsored NIP25 conference, the "International Conference on Digital Printing Technologies" http://www.imaging.org/conferences/nip25/index.cfm (currently, the deadline for submission is 22 February) I'm...
Hi, all I have been and am currently attending a couple of conferences last week and this. The IS&T sponsored NIP24 conference was last week. Please see http://www.imaging.org/conferences/NIP_DF2008/index.cfm for information. In particular, the Security & Forensic Printing session featured (links...
Posted to
Security Printing and Imaging
by
StevenSimske
on
09-16-2008
Filed under:
Filed under: security printing, security, brand protection, copying, forensics, copy-detection, DocEng, layout, MICR, conductive inks, OCR, optical character recognition, IS&T, NIP24, imaging, watermarking, document engineering, ACM