back to article Londoners can bonk their way to work without Oyster cards TODAY

Ticket machines on London buses are set to accept pay-by-tap credit and debit cards from today, it has been announced. The capital's Underground system is expected to follow suit sometime later, wirelessly siphoning cash from commuters and bypassing the Oyster card system. The system will use MasterCard's PayPass platform: but …

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  1. M Gale

    I wonder how much simpler this is to use than the completely dumb, non-electrical, no-RFID weekly tickets and daysavers that I'll routinely wave at the bus driver on the way to the seat?

    Yes, that was sarcasm.

    1. LarsG
      Meh

      Thank God

      This has only been foisted on London, whose population I have nothing in common with and lack any sense of sympathy for.

      Living in the North has its benefits, we still use real money, have poor Internet access and variable strength mobile phone signals. The fresh air is an added bonus as is conversation when shopping or travelling on a bus.

      I will not be moving house for this.

      1. LPF

        Re: Thank God

        As a Londener , I thank god that you are where you are , and if you never visit my fair city ever, then thats just gravy, sent via my supar fast broadband HAHA :)

        1. Elmer Phud
          Thumb Down

          Re: Thank God

          "As a Londener , I thank god that you are where you are , and if you never visit my fair city ever, then thats just gravy, sent via my supar fast broadband HAHA :)"

          Ah, the charm and wit of one of my fellow Londoners (demonstrates lack of education, too).

          Chirpy Cockney Sparrow - my arse - sounds like the very person I'm happy not to meet when up north.

        2. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Thank God

          With all the stunning walks, and beaches here in South Wales, 'super fast broadband' is of low priority, especiailly when you blow your nose, the worst outcome is going to be a bit of sand.salt water, and not the soot you get after a day in London.

          Incidently, I get 20Mbs d.l even in this 'hick' village ! :-P

        3. M Gale

          Re: As a Londoner

          As someone who was born in London and still has most of my relatives dahn sarf, I do like being able to go on a five minute walk and be in the middle of a load of green. The only disadvantage is that people up here think I "talk posh" and don't seem to know the difference between "born in London" and "born within sound of Bow bells", and people down there hear me speak and think I eat babies or store ferrets in my pants.

          As for trying to use the Underground during rush hour, being charged increasingly extortionate rates according to which concentric circle you want to get off within, or being taxed for daring to cross an imaginary line on the ground while in a vehicle.. you can keep it.

          1. M Gale

            Re: As a Londoner

            ...and let's not forget the very real chance of being arrested for wearing the wrong type of T shirt.

      2. Elmer Phud

        Re: Thank God

        I'm happy to have two or three Oyster cards hanging around.

        I'd rather lose one of them with only a few quid on than my bank card.

      3. LarsG
        Meh

        Re: Thank God

        At least living in my leafy northern county with its intermittent mobile signal, wifi, 3G and limited broadband when I do take my mobile phone out of my pocket in the middle of the town to make a call I have a 95% less chance of being mugged for it.

        1. Thomas 4
          Flame

          Re: Thank God

          As a Londoner, I often feel that the best way to improve upon my home city would be to burn it to the ground and sow the soil with salt.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      To Bonk or not to Bonk

      If I am bonking I am having sex, does this mean that each time I bonk on a bus or tube or train I will be arrested for indecency or cheered on by the crowd for my sexual prowess and stamina?

      1. Thomas 4
        IT Angle

        Re: To Bonk or not to Bonk

        Depends on the frequency of your bonkage, good sir and how well you treat the machine afterwards. If you merely bonk and disappear without a second glance backward, we shall know you to be a manwhore of the most shameless sort.

        1. Lee Dowling Silver badge

          Re: To Bonk or not to Bonk

          My favourite terminology for Oyster et al is actually "doinking". You "doink" in, "doink" out, "doink your card on it".

          Much more accurate, fun to say, can't be conveyed as rude nearly so easily ("Oh, I bonked her through the gate at King's Cross because she didn't have any money"), and much more satisfying.

          Doink.

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: To Bonk or not to Bonk

            "Oh, I bonked her through the gate at King's Cross because she didn't have any money"

            Does Oyster allow multiple concurrent journeys then?

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: To Bonk or not to Bonk

              Will I have to wait all year for the travelcard option to kick in and refund the cost difference between my current daily fare and a year pass?

          2. M Gale

            Re: Doink

            Just because: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ckMvj1piK58

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      @M Gale

      Are those the weekly tickets and daysavers you have to queue on a weekly/daily basis to purchase?

      1. M Gale

        Re: @M Gale

        "Are those the weekly tickets and daysavers you have to queue on a weekly/daily basis to purchase?"

        That would be the weekly tickets I buy direct from the driver at about 6am when there's no queues to speak of, yes. I suppose I could buy a season ticket direct from the bus company and avoid the 5-10 seconds of inconvenience. Either way, it works quite well and means that when the bus station/stop is busy, I can squeeze past the bonkers and cash-payers with a cursory wave of a pass, while they're reaching to place the card on the bonk-pad, waiting for it to register, then retrieving the card.

  2. Neil Barnes Silver badge
    WTF?

    Sometimes I wonder

    If I'm the only remaining Luddite who is absolutely and utterly opposed to this nonsense of transferring 'money' from me to various companies without my having to do anything?

    We live in a society now where the majority of payments take place without the payees interaction - bonks, obviously, but look how many utilities charge by direct debit; insurance companies, mortgage payments, ridiculous roaming charges... loads of *variable* payments over which you have no immediate control.

    If I'm paying for something, I want to know how much and I want to know when; that applies equally to the gas bill as a bus fare. Waving a card past a scanner may be easy but it lacks any sense of 'payment'; I'm not surprised people seem to be perpetually surprised about how little money they have...

    1. K.o.R
      Go

      Re: Sometimes I wonder

      The ticket gates do show you how much your journey cost you when you go through an exit barrier.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Sometimes I wonder

        But who has time to look?

        How can i keep track of my journey and get refunds?

        When Oyster messes up they refunded me easily, and the guards there have refunded without me asking when my card didn't work because it wasn't read right...

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Sometimes I wonder

          But who has time to look?

          It is a very minor skill to anticipate that you'll have about half a second to see this as you go through. But if I can manage this with my near-dyspraxia and poor eyesight, the vast majority of people should have no problem.

          How can i keep track of my journey and get refunds?

          Don't know for the Paypass, but certainly the Oyster online system enables you to see where and when you've been, how much you were charged, where and when you've loaded the card. It's almost spooky to see it show times to the minute for the start and end of your journey, the stations you travelled to. Particularly spooky if you're off on a jolly during work time, or going for an interview....

          How can i keep track of my journey and get refunds?

          I'd guess that the Paypass system will show a journey record for each payment along the lines of Oyster on line, like this, from my Oyster online account:

          Monday, 10 December 2012 09:08 - 09:36 Marylebone [London Underground] to Monument £2.00

          Other than the security concerns about wafting your credit card around in close proximity to the unwashed masses, I can't see why this won't actually work very well. On the underground though, will the pay by bonk fares be the same as Oyster prepay, or will they be the extortionate cash single fares?

          Refunds will presumably work in the same way as Oyster as well.

          1. fixit_f
            Thumb Up

            Re: Sometimes I wonder

            I like it and I'm all for it. Before direct debit I'd habitually forget to pay things, because I'm shit. Now I haven't missed a payment on anything in years because the logistics are taken out of my distracted hands and automated. That's progress as far as I'm concerned. I work with somebody who refuses to use any of these systems, with the result that once a week he spends a good half hour in the bank paying bills, sorting stuff out - life's too short. In the same way, I don't see topping up my oyster card as a problem or annoyance because I'm perfectly happy to use their auto top up facility and have it recharge itself. You can only spend so much on one of these things per day, which is plenty of time for me to realise that I've lost it or it's been stolen and cancel it.

  3. Richard 12 Silver badge

    So, given that my cards are in my wallet

    How the heck do I know which card - Oyster, MasterCard, Visa etc is the one that actually paid the journey? If I've got a bus pass on my Oyster, and the reader happens to see my MasterCard first and eats my money instead, what comeback do I have?

    Do we now need to separate all our cards into individual sheaths?

    Or carefully extract the card from the wallet before waving it at the reader, thus causing a massive traffic jam behind as cold, gloved fingers try to find the right card in the mass of plastic in any modern wallet or purse?

    1. localzuk Silver badge
      Trollface

      Re: So, given that my cards are in my wallet

      Or, you could do what people have always done since Buses asked for payment - have it ready before you get on? Crazy idea, I know.

    2. Doogs

      Re: So, given that my cards are in my wallet

      According to the tfl website, that's exactly what you'll have to do:

      "If you keep your contactless payment card and Oyster card together (for instance in a wallet) and touch them on the yellow card reader together, the reader will normally reject them both. This is because we can't be sure which card you want to use. If you have more than one contactless card (Oyster card, payment card or building pass), please choose the card that you intend to pay with, and touch it on its own on the yellow card reader."

      http://www.tfl.gov.uk/tickets/26416.aspx

      1. Dan 55 Silver badge
        Facepalm

        Re: So, given that my cards are in my wallet

        Translated:

        "If you weren't bothered about contactless payments and commute you'll already have an Oyster card and a contactless bank card. Now that this system has gone live you'll have to fumble around getting one of the cards out of your wallet and if you're going to do that then what's the advantage over a Travelcard?"

      2. Adrian Jones

        Re: So, given that my cards are in my wallet

        I had an Barclaycard One Plus, which was RFID credit card + oyster card.

        When Barclaycard took over Egg credit cards, they sent me a new RFID card, which stopped the oyster card part of the One Plus card from working. Barclaycard swore blind that it wasn't having any effect and refused point blank to replace it.

        So I no longer have any Barclaycards, nor will I ever again.

    3. ginglymus

      Re: So, given that my cards are in my wallet

      I already have four or wireless cards in my wallet, but it only has three flaps. Innovation in wallets is lagging severely behind. Things are getting desperate!

    4. Elmer Phud

      Re: So, given that my cards are in my wallet

      My Oyster cards are easily identifiable by the wallets that have 'Sack Boris' in large letters printed on them.

    5. Gareth Gouldstone
      Holmes

      Re: So, given that my cards are in my wallet

      I inserted a baking foil-wrapped piece of card into the lining of my wallet and placed the Oyster on one side and the PayWave card on the other. Now I can bonk with whichever side of the wallet is appropriate for the transaction.

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    I have an idea

    How about flexible tokens with numeric denominations printed on them, so they could be optically scanned. You could have numbers like 5, 10 and 20 printed on them, and use them in combination for other amounts. In fact, it is so flexible, you could probably use them to pay for all sorts of things. You could even have smaller, more manageable tokens for cheaper items. (Excuse me while I patent this.)

    1. jonathanb Silver badge

      Re: I have an idea

      You want to have a bus with loads of them travel through some of the not so nice parts of London? And wait while people count them at some of the busier stops?

      1. andy 45
        Thumb Down

        Re: I have an idea

        You mean like people did for about a century before Oyster cards were forced upon us by doubling the cash fare?

      2. Colin Millar
        Pirate

        Re: I have an idea

        Well - you could always let the people on to the bus in one go and then collect the fares once they are inside - you could have an additional member of staff to do this while the bus is on its way thus delivering the passengers more quickly to their destinations - a customer service improvement that customers actually want.

        1. This post has been deleted by its author

    2. Stuart Castle Silver badge

      Re: I have an idea

      Not fast enough and too expensive to keep/transport the cash..

      I don't know the specs for the Oyster readers on the bus, but the when specifying Oyster on the tube, TFL were looking for a device that could scan a card, authenticate it, check any tickets on it and and update the card by taking any appropriate money off it in less than .8 of a second.

      After all, while asking someone to spend 30 or 40 seconds sticking cash in a machine doesn't sound a lot (it isn't), it adds up when you've got 10, 20, 30 or more people behind you waiting to do the same thing. Now, add in the delay caused when the machine inevitably fails to recognise one or more of the coins or notes, and the consequent delay when the person is left to hunt around in their pockets, wallet, bag or purse for a replacement.

      Remember, whatever system they have chosen will eventually end up installed in the ticket gates in the major tube stations, where it will end up dealing with thousands of people an hour in each station.

      Then there's the security aspect (money is nick-able, cards aren't as they are never handed to the driver or left in the machine).

    3. ManiK67
      Megaphone

      Re: I have an idea

      Make them out of metal, they might last longer!

    4. This post has been deleted by its author

    5. edge_e

      Re: I have an idea

      (Excuse me while I patent this.)

      I'm sure apple already have...

      1. Neil Barnes Silver badge

        Re: I have an idea

        I suspect Mr Wombat is going to use rectangles with *square* corners for his invention.

    6. The Specialist
      Stop

      Re: I have an idea

      "How about flexible tokens with numeric denominations printed on them"

      Yeah, and lets call it MONEY.

  5. batfastad
    Go

    Cost?

    Are you charged the same as an Oyster journey?

    Or is it equivalent to the (extortionate) cash fare?

    I don't mind this. Pay bonking with cards is actually alright, so long as it's as fast as Oyster. But pay bonking on your phone, that's just daft. Having my bank account accessible through my phone as well as through the cards in my wallet? No thanks, that would double the potential theft/fraud targets.

    The rival platforms of Visa PayWave and Mastercard PayPass is horribly predictable though. Come on, it's almost 2013, do companies still need to be bothering to build rival platforms? This technology has probably been around for at least 10 years, you'd think it would have outgrown the playground bullying.

    1. Corinne

      Re: Cost?

      Good point - Oyster is promoted as being significantly cheaper than paying by other methods. Single tube journey paying with Oyster £2, identical journey using any other payment method £4.30 - this is just staying within the single central zone!

    2. M Gale

      Re: Cost?

      "so long as it's as fast as Oyster."

      I'm not familiar with the speed of Oyster. However if the bonk-payment and new RFID-enabled OAP passes are anything to go by, it's the slowest way of getting on a bus next to paying cash when the driver has hardly any change left.

      Just give me a laminated bus ticket that the driver can check using Eyeball Mk 1. Much easier, and quicker, for everyone concerned.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Cost?

        "I'm not familiar with the speed of Oyster"

        About 0.2-0.3 seconds on the tube for the card to be acknowledged and read. Just enough to be noticeable, and very marginally irritating if you're feeling intolerant, although an experienced user will judge their pace so as not to have to pause mid stride. It's probably faster than the circa half a second for the magnetic strip tickets.

    3. Gavin Jamie

      Re: Cost?

      It might cost more. There is a daily price cap on Oyster (as you cumulative bus spend can be stored on the card). They can't do this with PayPass so if you make more than three bus jouneys a day you will pay more than you would with Oyster.

      Better prices than cash though.

      1. Thomas 4

        @corinne

        Holy shit, really? oO

        Have you got a source for that, because that's disgusting if they're really charging an extra £2.30 just to bonk.

        1. BigAndos

          Re: @corinne

          The cost to pay by bonk is the same as the Oyster fare, the only issue is the lack of a daily price cap. If you did 10 bus journeys in a day it would cost you 10x single bus fare, whereas Oyster will cap it to the price of a daily travelcard.

        2. Corinne
          Unhappy

          Re: @Thomas 4

          Taken just this morning from the TFL web site. Type in any journey you want to do in their Farefinder (I chose Victoria to Paddington) and those were the prices quoted.

  6. sabba
    Facepalm

    What about non-repudiation?

    How can I prove that it wasn't me who used the 7.15 to Peckham on the 12th December? Don't like the sound of this at all. Can't wait for the first cases to come to light.

    Isn't this a backward step? We now have 3d Secure and its equivelants on the Web and pin numbers for machine based transactions. Surely contactless transactions make fraud more likely rather than less. It might only be a couple of quid per transaction but that'll soon add up over a month.

    I'll stick with the Oyster card I think.

    1. M Gale

      Re: What about non-repudiation?

      "How can I prove that it wasn't me who used the 7.15 to Peckham on the 12th December?"

      CCTV on the buses. FOI request.

      1. andy 45

        Re: What about non-repudiation?

        Pretty sure only the Plod could get that CCTV

        1. miknik
          Black Helicopters

          Pretty sure only the Plod could get that CCTV

          Nope. CCTV footage is covered under the Data Protection Act so for the relevant admin fee (£10 I think) you can request a copy and the CCTV operator has a legal obligation to supply it to you.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: What about non-repudiation?

        Read the story of the car driver in Holloway causing the death of a cyclist, if the bus video was working properly they'd have it on film and need not go through the court polava to try convict him

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: What about non-repudiation?

      Part of the point of "pay by bonk" is that you are limited to what you can spend before you need to authenticate yourself.

      So the fraud limitation is low, they will probably just pay you back on the first time you claim it wasn't you..but investigate further cases.

      1. sabba
        Facepalm

        Re: What about non-repudiation?

        There seem to be a number of naive postings on here. Let's run through a scenario...

        So I lose my card and it's used 30 times in a day (only a few pounds per transaction but as I said previously it adds up). At the end of the month I get my statement and see there's an issue. I appeal and start to track back. Now, is there a way to track from a specific CC transaction to an individual bus / train? If there is then fine, all I need to do is pay £10 per transaction to see the CCTV (ooh, that's starting to get expensive). I then need to try and identify the individual who used my card and / or prove that I wasn't anyone of the people on that vehicle and that I hadn't knowingly lent my card to any of them. Sounds like an expensive, time-consuming and ultimately fruitless experience.

        1. M Gale

          Re: What about non-repudiation?

          £10 is a fairly cheap price to see the scrote who nicked your card and get him hauled before the beak.

          Though granted, the police should be doing all of this anyway, minus the £10.

  7. sabba
    Paris Hilton

    And while I'm on a rant...

    ...having to get my credit card out amidst the general furore around the ticket machines doesn't seem like a good idea. Generally speaking people are in a hurry to catch a train so the chances of them subsequently mislaying, of having it mislaid for them, the credit card seem somewhat high. If I lose my Oyster card it's 30 quid gone. If I lose my credit-card that's a whole different matter.

    Also will they still offer the travel discounts that you get from using Oyster?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: And while I'm on a rant...

      No - to confuse matters more, bonking will give you the Oyster pay-as-you-go fares, but without the daily cap (since they don't know who you are, they just see a bunch of independent transactions). So it's not really an Oyster replacement so much as a cash replacement.

      Also, if your Oyster card is registered, you should only lose the few quid or so it costs to get a new one, rather than having to get your bank to stop your card, notify their fraud team, magic you some cash....!

      1. browntomatoes

        Re: And while I'm on a rant...

        I think this is aimed at tourists really.

        Oyster is not really that inconvenient even in pay as you go mode since you can set it up to auto top-up if you register online - whenever the balance drops below a certain level you can set it up to automatically add more credit from your credit or debit card (and that includes Amex whose NFC payment mechanism isn't mentioned in this article and doesn't appear to be very widely supported)

        Also if you lose your Oyster card and it was registered, they're good enough to refund you the deposit you paid on it and transfer the funds to a new card (although it's a bit of a pain to get the refund bit since it only credits when you also buy some other new credit, ie not an auto top-up credit or a season ticket; but the funds transfer is automatic), so the only loss is the difference in the deposit for a new card if it's gone up in price in the mean time, plus (potentially) whatever someone managed to spend on it before you reported it lost/stolen.

        1. Wize

          Re: And while I'm on a rant...

          "I think this is aimed at tourists really."

          Last trip to London, I had to get an oyster card.

          A year or two ago I visited and all I had to shell out for was a few bits of cardboard that I could poke through the machines.

          Yes, you get the deposit back on the card, but after a long queue at the last underground station you use. Which isn't a short queue especially when you want to make your onward connection.

          And I had to buy a week's ticket instead of the 3 one day tickets I got last time.

          But either of those two methods sound better than having to get a credit card that can be read outside my pocket.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: And while I'm on a rant...

        No - to confuse matters more, bonking will give you the Oyster pay-as-you-go fares, but without the daily cap (since they don't know who you are, they just see a bunch of independent transactions).

        They don't know who I am? Seems a bit last-century if they can't spot that I've used my ticket before on the same day using the same card, given that they're going to manage to get all my transaction and journey details onto one statement.

      3. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: And while I'm on a rant...

        "...No - to confuse matters more, bonking will give you the Oyster pay-as-you-go fares, but without the daily cap (since they don't know who you are,..."

        Yes, they can't tell who you are, they just manage to charge your bank account without that knowledge.... Honestly, the lack of critical thinking here is really getting lamentable.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: And while I'm on a rant...

          "Yes, they can't tell who you are, they just manage to charge your bank account without that knowledge.... Honestly, the lack of critical thinking here is really getting lamentable."

          You missed the point.

          You would like the supermarkets to do away with club/nectar cards and track your spending habits based on the card you use to pay for your groceries?

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: And while I'm on a rant...

            @AC 12:53 - What makes you think they don't? The advantage to them of loyalty cards is it covers all cards and cash and gives them more granular information about who you are and your demographic, address, etc.

  8. jeremyjh
    Alert

    Erm

    The TfL information doesn't mention Mastercard once. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/tickets/26416.aspx

    It says any contactless card carrying the symbol shown at the top of that page. Visa Paywave cards carry the symbol.

  9. David Harris 1

    Not for me

    I keep my Oyster card (and mainline rail ticket) in a separate holder, easy to get out for the barriers. If it's lost or stolen both can be replaced with a small amount of hassle.

    My credit cards and debit cards live in my wallet, kept somewhere deliberately hard to get at because they are more valuable to me and more of a pain if lost or stolen. I do not want to be riffling through my wallet at every ticket gate (as I can only present one card). That feels less secure, and it will slow me (and those behind me) down.

    Nor do I want to be waving my phone around at the barrier, for the same reasons.

    So I think I'll just thank TfL for this and carry on as I am.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Not for me

      "My credit cards and debit cards live in my wallet"

      TFL haven't thought this though. The idea of waving your ready-to-use credit card at the turnstile, or a £400 smartphone would appear to be a fabulous invitation for snatch thieves who are walking the other way. The victim may well struggle to turn round if there's people behind them, and the thief (choosing the moment) is already hot footing it down the road. Add to that the risk of dropping said phone under the trampling feet of other tube victims and it seems an idea that's too bad to be true.

  10. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    To replace Oyster? Really?

    I'm sure this initiative will benefit some users, but TfL have more pressing ways to spend their hard-earned. Oyster may have its critics but it does a pretty good job of handling a very complex task that has to cover pre-pay, daily caps and season tickets as well as giving users access to their journey history (which you can get emailed to you weekly as a csv).

    Bonking with a bank card is by no means a replacement for Oyster and I can't see that it will be, unless they start tracking users by bank card so they can intelligently apply daily caps and some sort of clever retrospective season ticket pricing. If they get rid of Oyster, how will I get (and use) a monthly season ticket by bonking my Maestro (ahem)?

    As it stands, the only benefit is for those few people still paying cash fares as they won't have to first queue up to get and load up an Oyster prepay card. TfL may eventually be able to stop handling coins and notes, but I think they'll struggle to ditch Oyster, especially if national rail operators start using compatible systems.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: To replace Oyster? Really?

      They can't stop taking cash, the public affairs committee that cover the underground said that would be an accessibility issue, they have to offer a method for people without a bank account/card to pay to use the system. Now how reaosnable that method is I'm guessing another matter

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    I hope they've notified the British Transport Police that thousands of gormless commuters will be waving their wallets and debit cards around in the crowded areas around ticket gates.

  12. El Bertle

    The four or five wires that form the induction aerial used to power up your bonk card can be exposed just below the surface of the card (try acetone to soften it). They are close to the left hand edge between the signature strip and the mag strip. If they were to be mysteriously severed, then that card would no longer interfere with any of the other cards in your wallet that you actually want to work remotely, like your access card.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Caution!

      Feel free to disable your card, but be aware: You do no own your card, it remains the property of the issuing bank or CC company. If you are found to have willfully destroyed the card or otherwise tampered with it, they are well within their rights to not issue you with another card and cancel the one that you've got.

      1. M Gale

        Re: Caution!

        Perhaps. However if the only "tampering" you've done is to remove an antenna so your card can't be scanned straight out of your pocket, and if you're at least a little bit skilled in the art of public relations.. that could look very bad for them.

  13. andy 45

    I want to remain anonymous when I travel

    This is still possible with my Oyster if I always top up with cash.

    I really do not want to start using my bank card for every trip I make, meaning someone somewhere would know my exact movements.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Black Helicopters

      Re: I want to remain anonymous when I travel

      "This is still possible with my Oyster if I always top up with cash"

      Depends how anonymous you want to be. In terms of privacy of an innocent person of no interest to the police, you've got that with your cash paid Oyster. But if they wanted to trace you then it's easy to tie your Oyster transaction times to CCTV, so a matter of minutes to tie a face to your card, a matter of seconds to collect your journey history. Electronically that's still anonymous without face recognition and a national identity database, but if so minded I suspect they could correlate the card movements with (for example) mobile phone records and if you're on contract that links to all of your electronic identities via banking records. You could argue that you've got a PAYG sim that is only ever topped up in cash and you never have switched on in the car (easy to link to your registration plate via ACPO's NPR), but even for a cash paid SIM the network records would still probably identify your home and work locations easily enough, and then they know who you are, and where and when you've journeyed on TfL.

      Rather than being anonymous, you're making snooping more difficult, and maybe that's sufficient.

    2. graeme leggett Silver badge

      Re: I want to remain anonymous when I travel

      I suppose it depends on who's tracking you and for what purpose.

      On the one hand, your bank tracking your movements and sending you an email that next time you're on the (your most used) line, you can get an extra 5% in store at Debenhams might be of borderline utility.

      On the other, TfL knowing that you take the Circle line every weekday at 4pm, letting you know that the station at the other end is closed and you should get off the stop before might be of more use.

      And worst case, if there was an accident in a tunnel it might help the emergency services to know that you went through the barriers a little before and have yet to exit from another station

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: I want to remain anonymous when I travel

        "And worst case, if there was an accident in a tunnel it might help the emergency services to know that you went through the barriers a little before and have yet to exit from another station"

        In any serious emergency there's likely to be an evacuation with barriers opened for speed, so it won't be any use for listing the unaccounted-for.

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: I want to remain anonymous when I travel

      Do you think that they can't trace your paper tickets?

      1. M Gale

        Re: I want to remain anonymous when I travel

        "Do you think that they can't trace your paper tickets?"

        Whoever "they" are, no. They can't.

    4. miknik
      FAIL

      Re: I want to remain anonymous when I travel

      You had better leave your mobile phone at home then

  14. MrXavia
    FAIL

    No daily caps... No weekly passes...

    how is this better than Oyster?

    1. D@v3

      it's not, it's better than cash

  15. brain_flakes
    WTF?

    "but Transport For London also has to hand over a proportion of every top-up to the companies running the scheme and would prefer to keep the dosh in-house."

    Em, I seem to remember credit card companies charge processing fees themselves.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      And

      Wouldn't it cost to take this service in house anyway? Say you use a company to run the scheme, isn't that just like outsourcing IT, if this was in house, it would cost more to manage and run.

      Interesting to see Manchester are looking at Oyster equivalent and will but using bankcards as well.

      http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/news/transport/public_transport/s/1589128_metrolink-passengers-will-be-first-to-use-new-oyster-card

  16. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    "the vast majority of bank cards issued in the UK support pay-by-tap"

    REALLY?

    I thought it must have the "symbol" on it to indicate that it has NFC chip in it?

    My D card doesn't!

    1. BigAndos

      Some banks are a bit late to the party! I had it with my old bank a couple of years ago, then moved bank and no more! Also, some credit card companies seem to be a bit behind the times.

  17. blcollier

    I wish I had a bloody oyster card...

    I travel on public transport - buses - an awful lot on Cardiff, and the Cardiff Bus "contactless" payment system is laughable. No topping up with a credit or debit card at all, just cash; to make it worse there's a max cash topup value of £20 per transaction - unless you visit the office which always has queues out of the doors and closes at normal office hours, so you can't even go there when you leave work.

    I'm not asking for much: I don't need weekly CSVs of my journeys or a 300-500ms transaction time, I just want to be able to add credit to the damn thing with my bank card on a webpage - I don't even care if it's not a phone-friendly site!

    I'd take the Oyster card - or NFC/RFID-enabled debit card - over this piece of crap any day of the week. Automatically adding credit? Bleedin' luxury...

    1. blcollier

      Re: I wish I had a bloody oyster card...

      Spelling fail: of course, "on Cardiff" should be "in Cardiff".... Why can't I edit my post like every other comment/forum software, Reg!

  18. Test Man
    WTF?

    You lot are nuts

    All this complaining about cards and "no I won't carry around another bit of plastic" or "bad idea" or whatever - it's a CHOICE! Now you have a choice of using a credit card, which for some people is great as they either don't have an Oyster or don't want to carry one round or find it easier to just use what they already have. No one has to switch! Choice is better!

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: You lot are nuts

      I don't think you understand: What we have in a lot of commentators on The Reg (and IT in general) is a sort of modern version of a Luddite, they can deal with capacities getting bigger and speeds getting faster, but if there is actual change they go mental and try to work out every possible reason not to accept it. This would be fine, but most of the reasons are ill conceived from a point of ignorance of the new technology.

  19. Dadz
    FAIL

    Mobile Paypass tags

    In Canada we have this new thing called a Mobile PayPass Tag by Bank of Montreal - it's a sticker with a

    paypass chip in it. You're expected to slap it on your mobile phone. The ads tout the ability to "pay with your mobile phone"

    It's embarassing.

    Paying with a mobile phone is done by

    1) nfc (on or off sim)

    2) on screen barcodes

    3) modulated encrypted hypersonic sound exchange

    4) wifi/bluetooth

    5) exchanging stolen phones for drug money

    It's not done with a sticker!

  20. Herby

    USA Reference...

    Go to your local record library and listen to MTA by the Kingston Trio.

    "This could happen to you!"

  21. mtp

    Multiple cards

    About a year ago I noticed that my Oyster card did not work from within my wallet. It problem is that I had a new credit card that supported wireless payment. The tube system could not make use of that card but presumably it was coming to life and messing up the oyster transaction.

    The annoying solution was to take the oyster out of my wallet every time I use it. Given that in the near future all credit cards will have wireless payment and most people carry more than one card this is going to be annoying.

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