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Cash
From alt.2600...
In article [email protected], Andrew Lewis Tepper <[email protected]> writes:
> Imbedded in 1991 series $20 bills (and I assume all later and higher
> bills) are thin plastic(?) strips with metallic writing on them. If
> you're careful you can remove them with a razorblade by slitting the
> bill's top edge and gently pulling it out. I've heard that airports will
> soon have "Money Detectors" that will count total cash carried per
> person. I'd like to figure out how the system works. I also think it
> would be cool for people to collect all the strips in any money they
> ever came in contact with and keep those in their wallets. Soon it would
> look like everyone was walking around with $100K's of cash, rendering
> their system useless.
>
> Andy
>
In article [email protected], [email protected] (Eric Fredricksen) writes:
> Anarch ([email protected]) wrote:
> : They're in tens, too (don't know about ones and fives). I've never been
> : able to remove one completely, but I've exposed the ends. Do you know
> : how many there are in each bill, and where? I know in tens there's at
> : least one, about a fifth of the way in from the left side (looking at
> : the front).
>
> They're easy to remove. Just rip the bill diagonally from the edge to
> the strip on either side of it, and pull the little triangle you just
> made. The strip comes with it. Show it to your friends.
>
Assuming this is true, it would seem that even good, old fashioned,
paper currency doesn't provide the level of anonymity that one
would think. Scary...
Dana W. Albrecht
[email protected]