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| United States Patent | 4863196 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4863196.html |
| Inventor(s) | Ohnishi; Kazuhiko (Himeji, JP);
Naito; Seishi (Himeji, JP) |
| Abstract | A certification identifying medium such as debit card or credit card
comprising a substrate preferably made of a paper material, a bar code
band printed or layered on the substrate with a material including a
magnetic material provided with a specific coercive force and a magnetic
record band disposed on the substrate to magnetically record information
of the bar code. A mask band made of a non-magnetic material is applied to
the substrate to cover at least the bar code band to prevent the visual
observation thereof. The bar code band generally comprises a plurality of
bar codes which have the specific coercive force different from each
other. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4863196 |
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Certification identifying medium |
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| Publication Date |
September 5, 1989 |
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| Filing Date |
January 4, 1989 |
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| Parent Case |
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 122,596, filed Nov. 20,
1987, now abandoned, which is a continuation of application Ser. No.
866,130, filed May 22, 1986 now abandoned. |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a certification identifying medium prepared to
obviate the possibility of an alternation of an identification medium,
such as money or prepaid card, check, credit card and the like, which
requires certification for preventing the forgery or falsification of the
identification medium.
Usually, money or prepaid cards, or debit cards, checks, credit cards,
identification cards, admission tickets and the like are prepared and used
widely by describing necessary items or informations such as numbers,
names, amounts of money and the like on a substrate such as paper or
plastic plate by means of printing operation, magnetically recording these
items or informations on the substrate by bonding a magnetic tape, or
bonding certifying information such as portrait photograph and applying a
tally impression. The thus made identification medium, however, is easily
altered to obtain a false certification by forging or falsifying the same.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An object of this invention is to provide an improved certification
identifying medium capable of preventing the medium from being forged or
falsified by locating a bar code band made of magnetic materials provided
with a specific magnetic coercive force and a mask band covering the bar
code band for preventing the visual observation thereof.
This and other object can be achieved, according to this invention, by
providing a certification identifying medium comprising a substrate, a bar
code band printed on the substrate or layered thereon by a material
including magnetic materials provided with a specific coercive force, a
magnetic record band disposed on the substrate to magnetically record
information of the bar code band, and a mask band made of a non-magnetic
material applied to the substrate to cover at least the bar code band to
prevent the visual observation thereof. According to the construction of
the certification identifying medium of this invention, the intended
alternation of such medium such as forgery or falsification can be
completely prevented.
The nature, principle and utility of the invention will become more
apparent from the following detailed description when read in conjunction
with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
In the accompanying drawings:
FIG. 1 shows a plan view an example of a certification identifying medium
according to this invention;
FIG. 2 shows a sectional view taken along the line II--II shown in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 shows a graph representing an example of magnetic characteristics of
magnetic materials contained in printing mediums of bar codes recorded on
the identifying medium;
FIG. 4A shows a brief sectional view of an insertion part of a read-out
device for the certification identifying medium;
FIG. 4B shows a brief plan view showing location of read-out means at the
portion corresponding to that shown in FIG. 4A;
FIG. 5 is a block diagram which shows one example of a read-out device for
the certification identifying medium, and
FIG. 6 shows timing charts representing the operation mode of the read out
device shown in FIG. 5.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to FIG. 1 showing an example of a certification identifying
medium according to this invention, a substrate 11 of a rectangular card
shape of the certification identifying medium 10 is made of a paper
material, and on the front surface of the substrate 11, a stripe of
magnetic record tape 12 as a magnetic recording band of a known type is
bonded or layered at a portion shown in FIG. 1.
As is shown in FIG. 2, which is a cross sectional view of the certification
identifying medium 10 shown in FIG. 1, informations represented by the
first and second bar codes 15 and 16, described in detail hereinafter, are
magnetically recorded to the magnetic record tape 12 and other items or
informations such as numbers, names, publishers, amounts of money may be
also recorded as ocassion demands.
The bar codes 15 and 16 are press-printed at the front surface of the
printing stripe portion 13 of the substrate 11. The first bar code 15 is
printed (or layered) on the substrate 11 with an ink containing a magnetic
material provided with a specific coercive force (for example,
characteristic I as shown in FIG. 3) to print a binarized pattern, and the
certification identifying mediums are usually prepared so as to have
binarized patterns which are respectively different from each other. The
second bar code 16 is also printed (or layered) on the substrate 11 with
an ink containing magnetic materials provided with a specific coercive
force (for example, characteristic II as shown in FIG. 3) which is higher
(or lower) than that of the first bar code 15. The second bar code 16 is
located at the predetermined position with a binarized pattern common to
all identification mediums. The print stripe portion 13 on which the first
and second bar codes 15 and 16 are printed is covered by a mask band 14
made of an opaque and non-magnetic material so that the user of the
certification identifying medium 10 and the other persons cannot recognize
the existance of the bar codes 15 and 16 beneath the mask band 14. The
mask band 14 may be disposed so as to cover the whole surface of the
substrate 11, and in addition, appropriate figures, photographs or letters
may be printed on the surface of the mask band 14.
The data or informations recorded on the certification identifying medium
10 having construction described hereinbefore will be read out by a
read-out device such as represented by FIGS. 4A, 4B and FIG. 5.
Take-in rollers 23 are located at a take-in (or out) portion through which
the certification identifying medium 10 is inserted into the read-out
device. A magnetizing means 24 and magnetic detecting means 22 and 21 are
located at positions in this order from the insertion opening of read-out
device towards the inside thereof so that, when the certification
identifying medium 10 is inserted into the opening as shown in FIG. 4A,
the magnetizing means 24 made of such as a permanent magnet is located
above the print stripe portion 14, the magnetic detecting means 22 is
located above the magnetic recording tape 12, and the magnetic detecting
means 21 is also located above the print stripe portion 14, respectively.
The location of these means after the insertion of the medium 10 will be
briefly illustrated in FIG. 4B. The magnetic detecting means 21 generates
a detection signal MD1 which is inputted into an amplifier 26 and a signal
MD2 from the amplifier 26 is then inputted into a read-out circuit 27 of a
threshold TH1, a read-out circuit 28 of a threshold TH2 and a clock pulse
generating circuit 29. A clock pulse CL from the clock pulse generating
circuit 29 is then inputted into a control unit 20 essentially consisting
of the read-out circuits 27 and 28, a central processing unit (CPU) and so
on.
Signals C1 and C2 regarding the read-out results in the read-out circuit 27
and 28 are inputted therefrom into the control unit 20 and the clock pulse
CL is also inputted into the control unit 20 to carry out the synchronized
operation. The magnetic detecting means 24 generates a detection signal MG
which is then read out by a magnetic record information read-out circuit
25 and a signal transmitted from the read-out circuit 25 is inputted into
the control unit 20. In response to these signals, the control unit 20
generates a certification signal AT and outputs a magnetic record
information signal MN as shown in FIG. 5.
According to the circuit construction described hereinabove, the operation
will be explained hereunder with reference to the timing chart shown in
FIG. 6.
When the certification identifying medium 10 is inserted into the read-out
device, the bar codes 15 and 16 are successively magnetized by the
magnetizing means 24 through the mask band 14, and in this time, the bar
codes 15 and 16 are magnetized so as to have the characteristics I and II
respectively shown in FIG. 3 thereby to exhibit the coercive forces H
different from each other. In accordance with the advance of the
certification identifying medium 10 into the inside of the read-out
device, the magnetic detecting means 22 detects the recorded information
of the magnetic record pattern portion 12 passing beneath the magnetic
detecting means 22, and the detecting signal MG from the magnetic
detecting means 22 is read-out by the magnetic recorded information
read-out circuit 25 and then transmitted into the control unit 20. Thus,
the informations of the bar codes 15 and 16 and the other items or
informations recorded in the magnetic recorded information pattern portion
12 are read out.
The bar codes 15 and 16 magnetized by the magnetizing means 24 are detected
in accordance with the advance of the identifying medium 10 by the
magnetic detecting means 21, and in other words, the magnetic detecting
means 21 detects the residual magnetisms of the bar codes 15 and 16, which
are then amplified by the amplifier 26 to output the detection signal MD2
which is risen up or fallen down response to the variation of the magnetic
flux at the front and rear ends of the bar codes such as shown in a part
(A) of FIG. 6. The clock pulse generating circuit 29 detects the bar code
15 of the first bit (at a time t1) and then outputs the clock pulse CL as
shown in a part (D) of FIG. 6. The threshold TH1 of the read-out circuit
27 is set to a high level and on the other hand the threshold TH2 of the
read-out circuit 28 is set to a low level as shown in a part (A) of FIG.
6. On the basis of these settings, the read-out circuit 27 detects a pulse
of the detection signal MD2 larger than the threshold TH1 in response to
the clock pulse CL thereby to read out the informations of the bar codes
15 and 16 and then generate a clock pulse C1 as shown in a part (B) of
FIG. 6. The read-out circuit 28 also detects a pulse of the detection
signal MD2 larger than the threshold TH2 and then generates a clock pulse
C2 as shown in a part (C) of FIG. 6. With these operation, it will have to
be understood that the level of the detection signal MD2 corresponding to
the bar code 16 becomes large and that corresponding to the bar code 15
becomes small. Accordingly, the read-out circuit 27 can read out only the
information of the bar code 16, whereas the read-out circuit 28 can read
out the informations of the bar codes 15 and 16 by setting the threshold
TH1 of the read-out circuit 27 to be larger than the pulse level of the
bar code 15 and smaller than that of the bar code 16 and setting the
threshold TH2 to be smaller than the pulse level of the bar code 16.
The control unit 20 collates the informations C2 of the bar codes 15 and 16
read out by the read-out circuit 28 with the informations of the bar codes
15 and 16 transmitted from the magnetic recorded information read-out
circuit 25 and generates the certification signal AT provided that the
information of the bar code 16 was read out by the read-out circuit 27.
The magnetic recorded informations MN regarding items read out from the
magnetic record tape 12 is also outputted. The generation of the
certification signal AT from the control unit 20 prooves such
identification as that the medium 10 used is not forged or falsified. If
forgery of the certification identifying medium 10 is made only by reading
out the magnetic recorded tape 12, this forgery can be discriminated
because the bar codes 15 and 16 cannot be read out, and also, if the mask
band 14 is scraped from the certification identifying medium 10 and
another information is magnetically copied, the coercive force difference
between the bar codes 15 and 16 is not detected, thus discriminating the
forgery or alternation of the medium 10.
The certification identifying medium 10 may be utilized for any certificate
or identification materials such as an official license, a bank book or an
indentity cards except those described herein before. The bar codes 15 and
16 may be of course provided with the coercive forces having intensities
reverse to those described before and it is only required for the bar
codes 15 and 16 to have a difference in their coercive forces which can be
read out by two read-out circuits. Moreover, further bar codes such as the
third and fourth bar codes may be provided for the medium. In addition,
although all requirements or items are provided on one surface of the
medium in the foregoing embodiment, these requirement or items may be
provided on both surfaces of the medium to read out the informations
regardless of the inserting direction of the medium into a read-out
device.
According to the certification identifying medium of this invention these
prepared as described above, intended alternations of the medium made by
copying the same with magnetic ink or bonding magnetic tape thereon, for
example, can be easily found out. The utilization of the paper-made
substrate makes it possible to produce the mediums with low cost, thus
being economical. In addition, the medium of this invention can be
utilized for such as a money or prepaid card, or debit card which will not
be used again after it has been one used.
It should be understood that many modifications and adaptations of the
invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art and it is
intended to encompass such obvious modifications and changes in the scope
of the claims appended hereto.
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Description  |
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