Images can't contain money?
I wanted to put a "$100 Challenge" graphic on a website. I took a screenshot, went to paste it, and got a message from Photoshop saying it can't print bank note images.
Fair enough, but I'm not trying to PRINT it, I'm not even trying to SAVE it, I'm trying to open it so I can put it into an image! No one at Adobe thought there might be a legitimate reason to put money in an image?? (Save money, make money, win money?)
I can open it in MS Paint. That'd be fine if I wanted TO ACTUALLY PRINT IT, but I wanted to use it as the basis for an image. I can't even paste in a screenshot that contains part of a bill.
This should have been better thought out. Someone managed to save the picture of the bill I screenshot 'd, and unless EVERY image editing software in the world has this "feature", it's not going to stop real counterfeiters. Plus, a $100 bill has an ACTUAL hologram, printing it on my HP Photosmart isn't going to fool anyone.
Plus, this "feature" barely seems to work. I was able to [steps to work around CDS removed by moderator]. It doesn't make sense, [steps to work around CDS removed by moderator] print it right from Photoshop. Guess I'll go be a billionaire now because I bypassed this security feature - except, oh wait, my desktop printer doesn't print HOLOGRAMS.
This is like stopping mass shootings by only letting people buy 1 bullet at once. At least there is a work around. But a better approach would be to let people paste in money, but require that they edited it or saved it in a low resolution. My guess is that anyone who wanted to use Photoshop for actual counterfeiting would need to print bills in multiple passes, but I would think replicating the paper and hologram would be so much of a challenge that just getting a program to print the bills would be comparatively simple.
