We RFID CARD wonstart spamming [Eros card holders] from very much advertisers,Mullins adds, which is tempting in the short term but disastrous ultimately.
The Eros card employs precisely the same technology because the Oyster card, an RFID-based fare payment card employed by over ten million British commuters inside the citysubway and bus system. Our prime-frequency (13.56 MHz) passive inlay inside Eros card includes a Mifare chip from NXP Semiconductors. The card contains a magnetic stripe onto which the customer account ID number is encoded that number can be printed evidently with the card.
Unlike the Oyster card, however, the financial transaction is conducted remotely with Eros. That's, the money within the Eros account is stored on a server, as well as the transaction is carried out through a payment network, by way of a message sent through the reader terminal containing the account ID encoded for the card RFID chip. On the other hand, every time a commuter uses an Oyster card, the interrogator deducts the fare value from what can stored about the card.
The Evening rfid inlay Standard caused several technology vendors to build up the charge card, Mullins says. TS3 Services Ltd., its lead integration partner, provided the application software so that online registration and maintains the database card IDs and also the value sent to each card. TS3 Services also installed theRFID-enabled payment terminals%u2014manufactured by Sagem%u2014at the 15 newspaper vendors accepting the Eros cards, near the Waterloo station.
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