The present invention concerns a Radio Frequency Identification device (RFID) system.
One embodiment of the present invention includes using a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tag 102 to store a Hospitality Industry Organization ID 104 of a customer. The RFID tag 102 can be detected and the Hospitality Industry Organization ID 104 determined. A device 106 at a hospitality location can be used to determine information about the customer to facilitate service for the consumer.
The service for the customer can be a personalized greeting by a doorman; providing of food or drink; the retrieval of luggage or golf clubs or any other type of service.
The Hospitality Industry Organization ID can include IDs for hotel chains, golf clubs or other such organizations.
Multiple Hospitality Industry Organization IDs can be placed in a single RFID tag.
In one example, the RFID tag only provides a relevant ID at the hospitality location. For example, the RFID tag can contain multiple IDs and the RFID tag only responds to interrogation from a hospitality location with the ID relevant for that location.
A rental car company can put the Hospitality Industry Organization ID into the RFID tag when the customer rents the vehicle.
As shown in
In one embodiment, the RFID tag 300 is such that only the relevant Hospitality Industry Organization ID is provided at a hospitality location. A computer at a hospitality location can be used to determine information about the customer to facilitate service for the consumer.
The RFID tag can be attached to a vehicle. In one embodiment, a rental car company can put the Hospitality Industry Organization ID into the RFID tag, when a customer rents the vehicle. The rental car company can then remove the Hospitality Industry Organization ID from RFID tag when the rental vehicle is returned.
An RFID tag can be used to identify a guest coming on-site, into a hotel or other hospitality industry establishment e.g. restaurants, casinos, country clubs etc . . . The tag may be configured to allow the service system at the site to expedite the provision of services to the guest. The tag may be permanently assigned to a particular individual or may be attached to a vehicle and programmed with the data related to an individual on a temporary basis. Examples of use cases are given below. The use cases differ significantly from those disclosed in US Patent Publication No. 2005/0038741, filed Jul. 21, 2004, entitled “METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR A TRAVEL-RELATED MULTI-FUNCTION FOB”, by Bonalle, et al. (Assignee: American Express Corporation), in which the inventors disclose use of an RFID enabled device to store personal and payment information using secure applications, utilizing a file structure that allows for an encrypted data transfer between RFID reader and RFID device. The RFID device may be embedded in a key fob or plastic card, or similar format common to the payment industry. The particular data structure and protocols used in the above mentioned application are generally suitable only for short range proximity applications and thus are not generally suitable for use for guest identification in a vehicle or at a venue entrance.
Examples of embodiments of the present invention can include:
In any of the above cases, the memory contained in the RFID chip may be sufficient such that a number of personal identification numbers are stored on a single device. The assignment of the personal identification numbers may be such that they identify both the establishment and the individual in a coded fashion that identifies the user only to those establishments to which he desires. Further this allows that participating merchants may be able to identify a customer but cannot easily identify other merchants frequented by the customer unless the customer has pre-approved the data sharing. For example a typical RFID tag may have 512 bits of user configurable memory. This is sufficient to store more than 10 user personal identification numbers. Each of which may used to encode more than 1 trillion unique combinations. Further with many commercial chip offerings it may be possible to password protect data fields such that the data is assigned memory locations cannot be retrieved by a reader that is not configured with the password.
The assignment of passwords and communication protocols may follow any of a number of schemes that give advantage in the particular use case deployed.
The foregoing description of preferred embodiments of the present invention has been provided for the purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Many embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, thereby enabling others skilled in the art to understand the invention for various embodiments and with various modifications that are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims and their equivalents.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/164,701 entitled “RFID CREDENTIAL FOR GUEST SERVICES” by Robert R. Oberle, et al., filed Mar. 30, 2009, which is hereby incorporated by reference [Atty. Docket No. RCDT-01024US0].
Number | Date | Country | |
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61164701 | Mar 2009 | US |