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Images: New look for the $10 bill

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  • 22182.jpg

    Alexander Hamilton is finally catching up with the times. The $10 bill, which sports a portrait of the 18th-century politician, joins the $20 and $50 notes in using new security features intended to defeat high-tech counterfeiters. Introduced in the 1990s, those features include color-shifting ink, watermark and security thread. The redesigned $10 bill is expected to go into circulation in early 2006.

    Published: July 20, 2006 -- 16:01 GMT (09:01 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

1 of 1 NEXT PREV
Bill Detwiler

By Bill Detwiler | July 20, 2006 -- 16:01 GMT (09:01 PDT) | Topic: Security

  • 22182.jpg

The sawbuck joins the ranks of the $20 and $50 notes with security features meant to beat high-tech counterfeiters.

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Alexander Hamilton is finally catching up with the times. The $10 bill, which sports a portrait of the 18th-century politician, joins the $20 and $50 notes in using new security features intended to defeat high-tech counterfeiters. Introduced in the 1990s, those features include color-shifting ink, watermark and security thread. The redesigned $10 bill is expected to go into circulation in early 2006.

Published: July 20, 2006 -- 16:01 GMT (09:01 PDT)

Caption by: Bill Detwiler

1 of 1 NEXT PREV

Related Topics:

Security Security TV Data Management CXO Data Centers
Bill Detwiler

By Bill Detwiler | July 20, 2006 -- 16:01 GMT (09:01 PDT) | Topic: Security

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