Contactless Smart Cards, RFID, Payment, Transit and Security

Hong Kong, Shenzhen considering combined smart card rollout

Thursday, January 28, 2010

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) has announced that Hong Kong and Shenzhen locals could be using smart cards to travel and shop by next year, according to The Standard.

The two cities are looking into a two-in one smart card that combines the Octopus card (Hong Kong’s contactless payment card) and its sister card, the Shenzhen Tong. The HKMA is also working on a reader that can handle both cards to aid cross-border business in the Pearl River Delta.


The HKMA hopes the move will encourage more banks to adopt contactless technology. So far only Citibank and DBS issue cards with Octopus functions - yet the technology has proven popular. The region boasts 20 million contactless cards in use, accounting for HK$12 billion in yearly transactions.

Additionally, the proportion of non-transport Octopus card transactions has increased from 6 percent in 2002 to 36 percent in 2009, while the value of non-transport transactions rose from HK$1.1 billion to HK$12.8 billion.

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Sticking to its plan for a contactless rollout in 2012, Australian retailer Coles has selected Ingenico to provide its Ingenico iPP350 contactless payment terminals.

According to finextra.com, the Aussie retailer first piloted the technology in September 2011, and has since decided to expand. All business groups will deploy the new iPP350 across 24,000 lanes within the next few months, making the retailer one of the first in Australia to offer the contactless payment option.

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Cheshire Integrated Transport Services teamed up with Applied Card Technologies (ACT) and sQuid to expand a UK smart card offering to the West Cheshire College and Chester College campuses.

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A journalist for the Mingpao Daily has managed to spoof a biometric self-service kiosk used for immigration clearance at the Hong Kong-China border, according to a PC Advisor article.

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StarChip and CEA-Leti have inked a partnership agreement to develop a contactless front end for smart card applications.

The partnership includes technology and know-how transfer to StarChip. With this combined experience in secure integrated circuit development and contactless technology, StarChip will roll out state-of-the-art smart card products to enable applications in transport, banking and identity.

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Switzerland’s LEGIC has announced two new partnerships that will bring the company’s contactless smart card technology to China.

Radio Frequency Systems, a manufacturer of contactless smart card technology, will use the LEGIC advant 4000 chip generation to create new reader modules for access control applications.

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The Asia Pacific region is one of the largest users of smart cards, so much that it now leads the world in using the cards to pay for travel, reports iTWire.

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