The invention relates to a digital card which is equipped with a CD or DVD bearing a contactless microcomputer chip for the transmission of data relating to the use of transport systems, such as Calypso, Icare and other new-generation systems, between a specific terminal and the microcomputer chip. According to the invention, other security devices have been added to the digital card such that it can be used as a personal identification means. The CD or DVD of the card can contain data relating to transport systems and/or personal identification and/or act as a support for other types of advertising or informative data, etc.
The object of the invention is accomplished by a digital card as claimed on claim 1.
Nowadays contacless and magnetic technology is used in public and private transportation by means of tickets with magnetic strips, chips and readers/canceling of these tickets. On the other hand it is also common to use magnetic cards as support. We also have the magnetic strip card with contact and/or contacless 125 Hz proximity chip for monetary and access purposes.
In general, the cost reductions obtained with the contactless technology are very significant compare with actual magnetic technology. In fact, comparing the magnetic terminals having a plurality of mobile mechanical components, of about 100, with their absent in the contacless terminals, the investment costs are divided by two and the maintenance costs are divided by a factor from 5 to 10.
On the other hand, the magnetic strip tickets have very limited information storage capacity due to its technology and the information being easily corruptible. The 125 MHz magnetic strip cards with contact or contactless proximity chip for access or monetary purposes, don't have the massive information storage capacity required by some actual multimedia applications.
For the reasons stated above, the joined application of the contacless Mifare chip in accordance to the ISO 14443 A/B norms and other ISO norms like 15693 and the CD/DVD digital card forming the digital card of the invention, provides the perfect means for the incentive and stimulation of public transportation, since it can overcome the inconvenience of actual technology.
Otherwise the digital card optimizes the promotion costs:
The following detailed description may be better understood by referencing the accompanying figures in which:
Regarding
The digital card 1 has a support 4 supporting a CD or DVD 3 readable by any standard reader and a microcomputer chip 2 with contact and contactless communication.
The digital card 1 may have many different forms and capacities. The digital card 1 can be the typical CD card of 30, 35, 40, 50, 100 Mb or a DVD card with different storage and format capacities. The digital card 1 can also be a USB card in its different categories. This is a digital support in its different ways, i.e., CD-ROM, CD-RW, etc.
The CD cards are CD-ROMs having the size and appearance of a business or credit card compatibles with any CD-ROM or DVD reader in the market. The CD cards represent an excellent support for the inclusion of all kind of information with the multimedia advantages: video, music, animations, text and completely interactive.
The usual capacity of a CD card is 30 to 50 Mb, having enough space to enter direct information about public transportation services schedules, advertising, city guides, etc; direct access to web pages through which clients could have access to updated information, and as in the case of nextbus.com, the clients could access pages having routes and arrival times of the transportation services and information regarding public transportation routes and schedules in real time thanks to GPS and GIS systems.
The digital card includes a contactless chip, that may be or proximity only or combined with a magnetic strip or with a contact chip or with other security devices (Wiegand System, barium ferrite, scratchers).
To manufacture the preferred embodiment of this invention to be used in public transportation in systems such as Calypso, Icare, and others, a contactless chip is used of the Mifare type, meeting ISO 7816 and ISO 14443 A/B standards used by Philips, Hid and other manufacturers in their semiconductor chips.
The open structure of Philips Semiconductors' Mifare system and others, allows other systems such as MasterCard's Pay Pass, to be easily added to this digital support, which will eventually be expanded to include other transportation systems, including railway systems, high velocity trains, urban buses, highway tolls, automatic billing systems in public places, conventional and electronic commerce and other applications.
Contacless technology is based on inductive transmission, which is used in the communication between a smart digital card and a terminal. The smart digital card stores the information; the terminal (scanner, register) reads or modifies the information. The inductive transmission offers various advantages:
a. Perfect distance control transmission
b. Optimum transaction speed
c. The card does not needs connections
d. Ergonomic comfort
e. Reliability (does not use any mechanical components)
f. Less expensive than microwave and infrared technologies
g. Possibilities for more applications
The insertion of the microcomputer chip 2 in the digital support can be done in a variety of ways. The microcomputer chip 2 can be inserted anywhere without obstructing the optical reading of the digital support; it can also come out of the rectangular digital card 1 or of any of the different shapes that the digital card 1 may have in order to facilitate the insertion of the contactless chip 2. The insertion can be made by laser, printing, lamination, die, injection or stamping.
The CD/DVD digital card 1 is entirely compatible with all the relevant operation standards and technologies; this guarantees its integration in any kind of environment. Between these standards and technologies are included:
The digital card microcomputer 5 comprises various actives zones, in particular the software or “mask”. Thanks to this evolutionary and modifiable software the microcomputer may obtains all is flexibility. The software is compatible and interoperable with the systems and software that follow European rule CEN 1545 relative to transport data and interoperation specifications (DOFOCO, IOPTA).
The terminal application development is facilitated by a high level command game (IPA: Interface Program Application), a secure structure using diversify keys, signed data and the Des, Desx, triple algorithms Del Des, that may be adapted to the different functions characteristics required on each moment and to desire applications.
The microcomputers 2 of the digital cards 1 of the terminal's cryptographic modules put into practice proven solutions like car-terminal mutual authentication, transactions certifications, DES algorithms, which particularly permits distantly reloading the digital card 1 under completely safety conditions. The mutual authentication between the microcomputer 2 and the terminals guarantees a decentralize security structure. Therefore, it is not necessary to systematically obtain a central server authorization.
Due to the safety, speed and versatility offered by the digital card 1 with contactless chip technology 5, we can say we are talking about “future money” base technology, since different technologies may be conjugated with respect to safety devices (finger print, biometrics controls, iris control, . . . ), access control and money charging devices, reaching a support that conglomerates individual identity and its money availability under optimum safety conditions.
This digital card 1 will begin to arrive to the people through and for public transportation, but it will reach the entire society once many applications are added to it such as:
The inherent benefits of the digital card 1 of the present invention are, among others:
a. Fights against payment evasion
b. Productivity increase
c. Diversify commercial nets (internet charges, mobile telephones, etc.).
d. New services.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/ES04/00272 | 6/14/2004 | WO | 00 | 7/6/2006 |