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May 16th, 2003 03:56 AM
ziggytrix http://www.treas.gov/education/fact-...tribution.html

They just take the old bills out of circulation as they get them back. They shred them up and sell it to DC tourists.
May 16th, 2003 12:51 AM
Jixby Phillips That's what I say.
May 15th, 2003 11:00 PM
Anonymous I don't get how printing new bills makes counterfeiting harder if the old bills still work.
May 15th, 2003 10:43 PM
Jixby Phillips
Re: Canadian Currency

- Yeah they are, and when you put them all together they spell out: SHUT THE FUCK UP, JIXBY!
May 15th, 2003 04:06 PM
Zebra 3
Canadian Currency

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jixby Phillips
Are they different shapes as well?
- Yeah they are, and when you put them all together they spell out: SHUT THE FUCK UP, JIXBY!
May 15th, 2003 09:09 AM
Helm Yeah, I bet it sucks that you can't roll up your 10 euros with your stacks of 500 euro bills, you capitalist pig (
May 15th, 2003 05:57 AM
FS Euro bills are different colors AND sizes and it fucking sucks. You can't make neat stacks in your wallet anymore or properly roll them up.
May 15th, 2003 04:40 AM
Jixby Phillips Are they different shapes as well?
May 14th, 2003 08:54 PM
AChimp No, see, you just grab the pink bill and you know right away that it's $20. That's what we do here in Canada:

Blue for $5
Purple for $10
Green for $20
Red for $50
Brown for $100 (but you only see these if you are rich rich rich )

There used to be $2 and $1 bills that were orange and light green, respectively.

Coloured money is much easier because you just have to fan the bills in your wallet rather than open it up all the way.
May 14th, 2003 07:38 PM
Esuohlim But now they'll be staring at the pretty pretty colors. Or, just like the Sacajawea coins, they'll be hoarded and no one will see them again.

But then again, it's 20 dollars.

This is such a perplexing puzzle, guys.
May 14th, 2003 07:22 PM
AChimp It was always fun to delay line-ups at the cash register while you stare at the number on each bill in your wallet. Shopping in the U.S. will be much easier now.
May 14th, 2003 07:15 PM
Esuohlim FUCK colorful money. Our country has the most boring currency in the world and it should stay that way.
May 13th, 2003 07:42 PM
AChimp <whisper>I think that the Americans think that if they make their dollar look like ours, it will start performing better like ours has been.</whisper>
May 13th, 2003 05:31 PM
Zebra 3
Monkey See, Monkey Do

- Damn Yankees mocking the Canadian currency for so many years, and now this!
May 13th, 2003 04:20 PM
Bennett and it looks like the banks are going to be filled with
GAYS!

OH NO
May 13th, 2003 04:10 PM
AChimp UH OH! LOOKS LIKE THE U.S. IS BECOMING MORE CANADIAN!
May 13th, 2003 02:07 PM
Cap'n Crunch
20 DOLLAR BILL WITH NEW COLORS

The Treasury Department's Bureau of Engraving and Printing introduced the new design, still featuring Andrew Jackson on the front but without the old circle, and a background with subtle green, "peach" and light blue hues.

Other new features include small 20s in faded yellow in the background of the back of the bill. In the background of the front of the bill is a faded bald eagle and the words "Twenty USA/USA Twenty."

The Treasury plans to redesign bills every seven to 10 years to keep up with technological advances in counterfeiting.

"The soundness of a nation's currency is essential to the soundness of its economy. And to uphold our currency's soundness, it must be recognized and honored as legal tender and counterfeiting must be effectively thwarted,'' Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said in a ceremony at the bureau.

The last redesign of American currency was in 1996, when a new $100 bill was introduced with anti-counterfeiting features such as ink that appeared black from one angle and green from another; a watermark visible only when holding the bill up to the light; and a security strip running vertically through the bill -- features that will remain in the newest currency.

Other currencies with similar features followed -- a new $50 bill in 1997, a new $20 bill in 1998, and new $5 and $10 notes in 2000.

The new $20 bill will go into circulation in the fall -- most likely in October, according to Thomas Ferguson, director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.

New $50 and $100 notes will be introduced in 2004 and 2005, each with different color schemes. New $5 and $10 notes might also be introduced. The $1 and $2 notes will not change.

In the meantime, the Treasury Department is working with companies in the vending, gaming and public transportation industries to help them adjust their currency-reading devices to accept the new bills.

Treasury has given these companies material they can use to update bill-acceptance devices, but nothing they can spend or use to make counterfeit bills.

But some currency experts warned that the new features likely will do little to discourage counterfeiters.

"Everything they've done before has been superseded by better counterfeiters," said Dennis Forgue, an anti-counterfeiting expert at Harlan J. Berk Ltd., a numismatic firm in Chicago. "With the effectiveness of computer-generated images these days, they can make some pretty nice counterfeits pretty quickly."

Of all the counterfeit bills in circulation, about 40 percent are produced digitally, according to the Secret Service, which was established in 1865 to fight counterfeiting.

Forgue said some counterfeiters are able to bleach the ink out of newer bills of smaller denominations, leaving just the unique currency paper and the watermark, and then print the features of a higher-denominated bill on the blank paper.

"The ones I've seen have been not that great in quality, but can pass in a lot of places," said Forgue, who doubted the features of the new bill would do anything to discourage people from this process, called "leaching."

The Bureau of Engraving's Ferguson acknowledged the new bill would not discourage counterfeiters from this process, but he said there would still be features that, with a quick look, could distinguish a "leached" note as counterfeit.

"It will still have a different watermark and security strip. You could tell the difference in about 15 seconds," Ferguson said.
-CNN

Great, all I need is to stand in the bank line longer for a gay guy to get his pink twenty.

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