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By Robert Lemos
Posted on ZDNet News: Jan 10, 2004 1:43:00 AM

Adobe and other makers of image-manipulation programs have, at the behest of a little-known group of national banks, inserted secret technology into their programs to foil counterfeiting, the companies acknowledged this week.

Photoshop and other programs will no longer be able to open files containing images of several nations' currencies, said Kevin Connor, director of product management for Adobe. The code to detect such images came from the Central Bank Counterfeit Deterrence Group, a low-profile association representing the national banks from Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States.

At the request of the group, Adobe and other software companies have inserted the functionality into their programs.

"This is a relatively new thing," Connor said. "We are not the first software application to do this, but we are probably the largest."

While Connor didn't know which currencies were protected by the technology, users of Adobe Photoshop CS and Jasc's Paintshop Pro have complained that files containing images of the new U.S. $20 bill and several Euro denominations cannot be opened. Moreover, Connor stressed that the technology is already included in most color printers.

The creator of the technology, Digimarc, confirmed that it had produced the code under contract to the banking group, but wouldn't discuss any details.

"Due to the nature of the project, all the players and details are confidential," said Leslie Constans. Jasc, the maker of Paintshop Pro, couldn't be reached for comment.

Little information exists on the Central Bank Counterfeit Deterrence Group (CBCDG).

The association was formed in 1993 by the governors of the G-10 central banks, according to the Bank of Canada's annual report. Originally called SSG-2, the group has mainly been given the task of developing a system to deter computer-based counterfeiting. In 2003, the United States gave $2.9 million to the counterfeit-deterrence program, according to a report from the Federal Reserve. The Bank for International Settlements acts as the association's agent in contractual arrangements, according to information on the BIS's Web site.

The group could not be contacted for comment.

As early as 2000, the Central Bank Counterfeit Deterrence Group started approaching companies that made image manipulation programs as well as color printers, asking them to include anticounterfeiting technology in their products. In addition, the European Central Bank has requested that the Commission for European Communities create legislation that would make the inclusion of such technology mandatory.

In the United States, such technology goes beyond the requirements of the law. U.S. artists are able to scan and use the image of currency in their works as long as the image is less than 75 percent or greater than 150 percent of the dimensions of the original bill. Artists are also required to only make single-sided prints of the image and to destroy the digital copy when the work is done.

"The current implementation does not take into account your intent," said Adobe's Connor, who characterized the curtailing of artists rights as just "changing the source of where you would get the images."

Now artists will have to download images from a legal source, such as the U.S. Bureau of Printing and Engraving.

Yet, one poster to Adobe's forums found that even bank-provided images of currencies couldn't be opened. A collage of several denominations from a Swedish bank couldn't be opened.

"This is insane," the person wrote. "Nobody, and certainly not software I pay for, should have any say of what sort of image I am allowed to open."

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 46 Talkback(s)
Just advances the open source alternative
see the code, remove the block, become the lead seller, watch Adobe slip into Corel's shoes, knocked out by its own decisions and an open competitor.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: FilledOut Posted on: 01/15/04 You are currently: Logged In as: a Guest  | Login | Terms of Use
ADOBE saving us from ourselves... - TEST it YOURSELF  povimage | 01/09/04
Orwelling, sad, and easily defeated...  BillDollar | 01/10/04
Money wasted!!  womanmarine | 01/12/04
Photoshop CS  BobWeston | 01/09/04
Your damned if you do and your damned if you dont..chill.  jimk_z | 01/10/04
To each thier own  Pongo13 | 01/10/04
No, don't chill...  robshreve | 01/11/04
Oh... my... god...  Zulummar | 01/11/04
Product Activation in Adobe Software  tic swayback | 01/12/04
Not Worth It  RoyTyrellFl | 01/09/04
Can you say class action lawsuit?  d_jedi | 01/10/04
Objections  Martin Marvinski | 01/10/04
hmmm  Zulummar | 01/11/04
Can you say class action lawsuit?  hognoxious | 01/11/04
Can you say class action lawsuit?  d_jedi | 01/11/04
Who next?  slapmaxwell | 01/12/04
So what else is Adobe not telling us about their products?  KECKSTER | 01/10/04
who pays for the rd costs for this  JWatson77 | 01/10/04
GIMP  pj-xmesh | 01/10/04
Our cars DO monitor our driving  radellaf | 01/15/04
Orwellian, sad, and easily defeated...  BillDollar | 01/10/04
What next  FilledOut | 01/10/04
Adobe Announces new Ashcroftware Line of Products  pollymathis | 01/10/04
More to come...  concernedcitizen | 01/11/04
Amen...  robshreve | 01/11/04
On second thought, this may be a good thing...  robshreve | 01/11/04
don't buy adobe  gsbtech | 01/11/04
Waste of time  John L. Ries | 01/11/04
When you voted for Bush, you should have expected this  Atlant | 01/12/04
Government Control is Non-Partisan  mhanratty | 01/12/04
Constitutional rights  acetroubleshooter | 01/12/04
You're exactly right.  libertyaikido | 01/13/04
Freedom is soooo inconvenient  Sunny Jalolly | 01/12/04
Ignorant Americans  Stupid_people | 01/12/04
Painting with a broad brush, are we?  kywriter1@... | 01/12/04
You got it all wrong  Stupid_people | 01/12/04
Which party is that?  tic swayback | 01/12/04
People like you make Republicans look bad  ndelc | 01/12/04
Where does it end???  No_Ax_to_Grind | 01/12/04
Simple solution  Chris Moller | 01/12/04
Shhhhhhh .... don't give out ideas  toomuchgreeatea@... | 01/12/04
We NEED better labling laws for digital content.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 01/12/04
Agreed, and throw in the license agreements too!  tic swayback | 01/12/04
What a stupid idea.  bhanes@... | 01/12/04
hehehehehhe. what a waste!!!  princessangry | 01/13/04
Just advances the open source alternative  FilledOut | 01/15/04

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