A ā€œspockedā€ CAN$5 bill (image via Facebook)

You may recall that last month, when actor Leonard Nimoy died, Canadians went into a frenzy ā€œspockingā€ their $5 bills ā€” aka drawing on the banknotes in order to turn former Canadian prime minister Wilfrid Laurier into Spock. When I was editing our story about the phenomenon, I discovered something curious: you canā€™t Photoshop money.

This may not come as news to everyone (someone on Reddit discovered it three years ago), but it was a surprise to us at Hyperallergic. Because itā€™s not just that you canā€™t Photoshop ā€” as in edit in the Adobe program ā€” money; you canā€™t even load an image of a CAN$5 banknote thatā€™s already defaced to picture Spock and say ā€œlive long and prosperā€ into Photoshop. When I tried, hereā€™s what happened:

(screenshot by the author)

Clicking on that ā€œInformationā€ button takes you to the website of the Central Bank Counterfeit Deterrence Group, specifically a page titled ā€œBanknotes & Counterfeit Deterrence,ā€ which warns the visitor quite sternly:

Every country has legal restrictions on the reproduction of banknote images. The counterfeiting of currency is a crime, and while restrictions vary from country to country, in some countries, any reproduction of banknote images ā€” even for artistic or advertising uses ā€” is strictly forbidden. Even in countries that allow some limited use of banknote images, there are specific rules and requirements.

But of course, country-to-country rules and requirements donā€™t matter if youā€™re uniformly prohibited from importing images of money into Photoshop. Which appears to be the case, at least theoretically.

I wrote to Adobe to ask for an official statement or policy on Photoshopping images of money, but never heard back. I did find this conversation in a Photoshop community support board, in which an Adobe employee explains that the ā€œCDS systemā€ (counterfeit deterrence system, with a redundancy) has been a ā€œfeature ā€¦ since Photoshop CS (8.0) released in 2003ā€ and is a matter of ā€œstay[ing] on the good side of law enforcement.ā€ Accordingly, in an online forum (ah, good old forums) called The Photoshop Cafe, a post from 2004 reproduces an allegedly official statement from Kevin Connor (a longtime Photoshop manager whose name is misspelled in the post). It says, in part:

Photoshop CS does indeed include a counterfeit deterrence system (CDS) to prevent the illegal duplication of banknotes. The CDS was created by a consortium of central banks from around the world. We, along with other hardware and software manufacturers, have included CDS in our products at their request to address the threat posed by the use of digital technologies in the counterfeiting of banknotes. There are other software products from other companies that already use this same technology. There are also hardware products that use the same or similar technology. For example, most color copiers sold today will not allow you to copy currency.

He goes on to explain that ā€œthe current implementation of CDS will prevent you from scanning in your own banknotes even if your usage intent is entirely within legal boundaries.ā€ In order to get legal images of banknotes to use, you must obtain them from the US Bureau of Engraving and Printing, or similar bodies in other countries.

But the funny thing about the CDS feature in Photoshop is that it doesnā€™t appear to always work. After running an admittedly limited number of tests, I came up with mixed results that donā€™t appear to add up to any cohesive policy.

My photo of a dollar bill in Photoshop. It probably worked because itā€™s not a very good picture.

Photoshop CS6 (version 13.0 x64) would not load images of:

It would load images of:

I was surprised to find that it worked most of the time, rather than the other way around ā€” but thereā€™s clearly much more analysis to be done on how software programs recognize bills; this is a good start for further reading. Luckily, if youā€™re just resizing images, like I was attempting to originally, Apple Preview seems to have no scruples. If youā€™re looking for a Photoshop workaround, try (where else?) YouTube.

Jillian Steinhauer is a former senior editor of Hyperallergic. She writes largely about the intersection of art and politics but has also been known to write at length about cats. She won the 2014 Best...

22 replies on “What Happens When You Try to Photoshop Money”

  1. In the end, somebody really into scanning this will scran part of the note in very hires, and assemble the parts in the end.

    1. I was going to ask if this had been tried in GIMP. Sounds like you had success? Not that I want to edit images of bank notes. I’m just curious.

      1. It’s open source so you’d always be able to edit the source and recompile relatively easily to remove any “CDS system”

  2. This has been true in copiers for decades. I was told this by the manager of the printshop of the company I worked for in the 80’s and 90’s. No news here.

  3. I thought this was common knowledge, I certainly remember articles about from when Adobe made the change.

  4. Does this detection/prevention not prevent our exercise of free speech? What if I wanted to enlarge a bill to many feet/cm long, and use it in some form of fine art? or political protest?
    Having software do this seems very Big Brother like. Yes, the goal is counterfeit prevention, which I am for but, as a designer trained during the change from pre computer to computer based production, I know both well, I think any real counterfeiter will do it with plates + chemicals and that means camera ready art. Not desktop scans. (This old analog printing tech is probably the best anti counterfeit measure now that it is rare versus common computer based offset print production.)
    If Adobe and MS did this money detector on own, fine. Some over cautious corporate lawyers probably did it. But if implemented by USTD, not good.

    1. You can sometimes reproduce money if it is a lot larger than actual size. Years ago, I did some work for a bank, but we had to get special permission from the Treasury Department. I’m not sure if they still allow this as the paranoia level within the government has increased greatly since then.

  5. Cash counting and authentication machines, like CSI/DLR CPS1500, DLR7000 do this image scanning, corellation, fitness (reflectivity of white) estimation, sorting, with speed of 25 notes per second. On old machines, it’s b/w 100dpi scanning and software is running on Win2000.

  6. Try covering the Federal Reserve seal with the FR district letter and you should be able to edit or copy the rest of the bill.

  7. On a related note, since we’re talking about art and counterfeiting,
    there’s the famous case of Akasegawa Genpei, and the Thousand-Yen Note
    Incident in the 1960s, in which Akasegawa was convicted of
    counterfeiting/forgery for producing (rather blatantly imperfect)
    reproductions of paper money to be used in various ways in art
    production and art practice. Akasegawa passed away late last year, in
    October 2014.

    http://keithwhittle.org/blog/genpei-akasegawas-1000-yen-note-incident/

  8. some years ago the Australian government reinstated the Queen’s image on the $5 note. Republicans went nuts.

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