London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London.

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Old September 17th 03, 02:49 PM posted to uk.transport.london
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Default Oyster Card - charge?



One of the things that scare me about these cards is the way they can

place
you near a scene of a crime, so if you have a record anyway, you are

likely
to raise alarm bells even if you had nothing to do with it.

Plus, the ramifications of other people potentially being able to

purchase
a
record of my movements...no thanks!


If you've already got a monthly paper travelcard LUL already have this

data.
The Oystercard just adds bus journeys to the data they could collect about
you.


Were the ticket machines definitely able to hold data from paper travelcards
?




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Old September 17th 03, 02:52 PM posted to uk.transport.london
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"simon" wrote in message
...


One of the things that scare me about these cards is the way they can

place
you near a scene of a crime, so if you have a record anyway, you are

likely
to raise alarm bells even if you had nothing to do with it.

Plus, the ramifications of other people potentially being able to

purchase
a
record of my movements...no thanks!


If you've already got a monthly paper travelcard LUL already have this

data.
The Oystercard just adds bus journeys to the data they could collect

about
you.


Were the ticket machines definitely able to hold data from paper

travelcards
?


I should have added the word *potentially*. As a paper ticket has a ID
number just like an Oystercard, it would be fairly trivial to log everything
in a database and cross-reference it with the customer records.


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Old September 17th 03, 03:18 PM posted to uk.transport.london
K K is offline
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On Wed, 17 Sep 2003 15:41:06 +0100, "HP" wrote:


One of the things that scare me about these cards is the way they can place
you near a scene of a crime, so if you have a record anyway, you are likely
to raise alarm bells even if you had nothing to do with it.

Serves you right for getting a criminal record in the first place,
then :-)


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Old September 17th 03, 04:07 PM posted to uk.transport.london
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K typed


On Wed, 17 Sep 2003 15:41:06 +0100, "HP" wrote:



One of the things that scare me about these cards is the way they can place
you near a scene of a crime, so if you have a record anyway, you are likely
to raise alarm bells even if you had nothing to do with it.

Serves you right for getting a criminal record in the first place,
then :-)



ITYM "Serves you right for buying a bog roll from Sainsbury's..." ;-)

--
Helen D. Vecht:
Edgware.
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Old September 17th 03, 07:25 PM posted to uk.transport.london
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"Ed Crowley" wrote in message t...
If you've already got a monthly paper travelcard LUL already have this data.
The Oystercard just adds bus journeys to the data they could collect about
you.


Really? You had to give your name and address? Do they ask for
documentation or can you give any old name?

Asda asked me for my postcode today "Do you mind if I take your
postcode?", "Yes", *blank stare*. I dont think they are used to people
refusing. I was going to give "SW1A 1AA" but I forgot


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Old September 17th 03, 08:25 PM posted to uk.transport.london
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In message , Paul
Weaver writes
Well I always pay cash, and I'm thinking of buying a balaclava. I dont
peopel people seeing me, I dont like my movements in a database. Soon
as we get a corrupt government (basically all socialist and
conservative governments) they can abuse the information.


I'm afraid you are too paranoid to live in modern society. Please call
in at your nearest deprogramming centre where your sentient abilities
will be disabled to prevent further distress. Please be assured your
continuing welfare will be provided for in your new role as a Labour MP.
--
James Masterton - www.masterton.co.uk
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Old September 17th 03, 10:44 PM posted to uk.transport.london
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K wrote in message . ..
Serves you right for getting a criminal record in the first place,
then :-)


Ahh, the typical commumist viewpoint. What if you've just been
suspected - adter all they want to take your DNA now even if you arent
guilty. Of if you live in a dodgy area? Or if you have unpaid parking
tickets? Or if they just need to look like they are doing something
and pick you out for the sake of it.

And all it takes is someone to copy your oyster card (dont say it cant
happen), and then the police go "what were you doing in wimbledon on
the night of the 15th" and you say you werent there, but they have the
evidence.
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Old September 20th 03, 05:16 PM posted to uk.transport.london
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On Fri, 19 Sep 2003 16:21:03 +0100, Jason Hobbs King wrote:
A postcode alone is not enough to identiffy most addresses, and
certainly won't identify the occupants.


No it wont, yet it is still gathering information, and they can make a
good guess from one person to the next. You might be the only customer
from that address, and they can see you buy similar things each shop. Pay
by credit card once and they can fairly confidently link all of your shops
together under your name.
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Old September 22nd 03, 12:49 AM posted to uk.transport.london
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On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 01:13:16 +0100, David Boothroyd wrote:
What I wonder is whether it's possible to search for a specified Oyster
card chip in the neighbourhood by stepping up the power of a detector. It's
done on RF so it's not totally impossible that all you would need to do to
find one is have a suitably sensitive detector and then it wouldn't matter
whether someone used the card.


I'm guess its something like an RFID, and we all know how bad those are


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