Tag REAL ID

Or Are You Just Glad To See Me?

Starting this week, the State of New York has begun to issue driver’s licenses with RFID chips embedded in them. For the moment, the one “enhancement” that the licenses offer is to allow anyone who has one to cross the border into Canada, Mexico, Bermuda, and some other Caribbean islands without a U.S. passport. The present system apparently does not contain any personal information about you, merely a code that can be read by a border crossing guard that verifies you as a U.S. citizen. We are officially on the slippery slope to RealID now, but I guess we’ll just have to deal with the practical aspects first, namely keeping your RFID-equipped tracking devices “enhanced ID” from being swiped.

This company in Standish, Maine makes and sells a handsome wallet they call the “Rogue Wallet”, and they now offer a model that has built-in RFID shielding. I would expect that within a couple of years, pretty much every wallet maker in the world will be pumping out wallets with RFID shielding, but their wallet has a few other nifty features: it’s designed to go in your front pocket, which is a traditional deterrent from pickpocketers (not a big problem in this country, but travellers should know that pickpocketing is rampant in many other countries). It’s also significantly slimmer than a regular wallet, even when you load it up with a pile of plastic cards. That should help to avoid having to explain the bulge in your front pocket to everyone. Plus, for their non-shielded models they have a wide range of styles, including an animal-free version for the vegan crowd, and an alligator-skin version for the die-hard carnivore crowd. The RFID-shielded model is more expensive than their standard models, but not out of line for a nice wallet.

Washington, Vermont, Arizona, Michigan, Texas ands California all have some sort of program in the works to issue RFID-enabled driver’s licenses. Ironically enough in this context, Maine is one of the states that has refused to go along with RealID, so Mainers don’t need to rush right out and buy these wallets, unless they have other RFID-enhanced cards (several credit card companies are issuing RFID credit cards already). Whether it’s your driver’s license, your credit card, or even just one of those security cards you need to get in and out of an office building, the days of carting around a whole stack of RFID-enabled cards is here, so don’t dally on keeping them safe from would-be sniffers.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Win One, Lose One

Ars Technica sums up the present situation with the REAL ID program that the Department of Homeland Security would like to shove down the throat of every single person in the country. In brief, there are now 17 states which have passed resolutions rejecting some or all of the provisions of the REAL ID Act, and so DHS has started backing off of the implementation schedule they originally proposed, moving rom 2008 to 2013. They are also backing off on the degree to which they will enforce the “no-fly” provision for people from states which do not adopt REAL ID standards. Additionally, Congress rejected giving DHS $300 million for the program over the summer. 2013 is TWO whole presidential election cycles away, so the likelihood of REAL ID survivng that far out is pretty weak.

Meanwhile, you don’t have to wait to be vetted by the Gestapo to be allowed to fly. You can pay for the privilege RIGHT NOW. As has been anticipated pretty much since September 12, 2001, there is finally a commercial enterprise that will certify you as a 100% Patriotic Non-Terrorist American Hero. In return for letting them do a full background check on you, they give you a nifty little card that lets you bypass the long security check-in lines at a number of major airports (only an handful right now, but expected to increase) without having to take off half of your clothing and dump everything on your person into a gray plastic tub for X-ray scrutiny. And for this you only have to pay $99.95! Isn’t America wonderful! I can almost guarantee that frequent business travelers will be permanently signing away their right to privacy in DROVES!

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

One Card To Rule Them All

Via Slashdot, I read this BusinessWeek article that talks about a startup company whose idea is to combine your driver’s license and your debit card into just one piece of plastic.

While this sets off all sorts of alarm sounds for me, I can’t deny that they’ve got some strong synergistic thinking going on here. Retailers are going to like it for a couple of reasons: first and foremost, the cards are not tied to credit card companies, who charge high fees to process transactions (side note: whenever a local merchant asks me “debit or credit?” when I use my card, I always choose debit because the merchant pays less for my convenience of using the card). Meanwhile, because the financial transaction is tied to a valid ID, the retailer has personal information that they can use for a variety of purposes (not all of them beneficial to the customer, unfortunately).

I hope you can see where the pitfalls are with this idea so that I don’t have to go through all of them again. But I think they’ve probably come up with an idea that’s going to go over well with everybody except the credit card companies. They’re test-marketing the combo cards now in Texas and have very wisely started out with gas station/convenience stores, which traditionally have very slim profit margins and will see the most benefit from reducing credit card fees. Plus customers have been very receptive to pay-at-the-pump systems — it’s a good introduction of the idea to consumers before it starts to manifest itself in other retail interactions.

At the moment, only 24 states issue driver’s licenses with magnetic strips, which is probably the single biggest hurdle to this concept. Their other concept, though, is to offer this same service through loyalty card programs (you know, the cards you use at the supermarket). While this lacks some of the synergy of sharing a payment system with a legal identification system, not to mention lacking the promise of eliminating plastic cards from your wallet, it’s still likely to catch on AND has a national market.

What’s not mentioned in the BusinessWeek article (or at NPC’s own website) is what the impact of the impending RealID program from the Gestapo will have on their business model. On the face of it, it would seem like a standardized national ID card with magnetic striping would give these guys the green light to go big. But there’s a lot of opposition to RealID, and backlash could limit them, especially in a state like Massachusetts, where our licenses don’t have mag strips and our political sensibilities often determine our consumer behavior.

Comments:
The idea for this came from Joe Randazza of National Paymentcard LLC in Boca Raton. The problem for US Merchants is the egregious increases of Interchange fees impacting the bottom line of US Merchants. Last year there was a 22% increase in Card Association fees to the Convenience Store industry.

Card Association fees are 8.3% of total operating costs for Convenience Store operators. See www.nacsonline.com. Fees are twice as high in the US as in Canada. While fraud rates are decreasing. There is no market competition to speak of and the Card Associations own the cash flow of US Merchants. This solution offers US Merchants the opportunity to direct the savings in Interchange fees into a Loyalty or frequency program and the chance to take back their cash flow.

ACH PAY LLC is developing a credit card terminal interface for the National Paymentcard ACH Service Bureau for US Merchants.

Randall Shake
CEO
ACH PAY LLC
Posted by Randall Shake [URL] on 05/22/07

Thanks for your comment, Randall. I will be watching this with great interest (no pun intended).
Posted by Brian [URL] on 05/23/07

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

All Original Content Copyright © BrianKaneOnline
All Other Content Copyright © Its Original Authors

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress

Switch to our mobile site