I'm a londoner and we have here a system of public transport which is controlled by cards ('oyster' cards, RFID credit card sized things - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyster_card).
Not exactly to address your point but they're a good way of tracking individuals so I always try to pay anonymously (cash) and never register it. I should probably buy a new one every few months but usually forget.
FYI anyway. Privacy aside it's a pretty decent system.
They can recognize your face as you tap at the turnstile. Maybe they don’t do it now, but if they currently don’t they will in the name of anti-terrorism.
Your comment brings to mind my experience on reddit: no matter how innocuous something I wrote seemed to me, someone attacked me for it. I finally bailed.
I'm sorry to hear it :( That may be what's happened here, an innocuous comment mis-taken by myself.
But before I go finally, tell me please in your view what was a reasonable interpretation of https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21823201 I pretty well described how it came across to me, effectively that we're all in a surveillance society and if we aren't we soon will be like it or not. I can salvage nothing worthwhile from that poisonous nihilism.
For a typical workday there are so many datapoints: Checking into the secured bicycle parking, walking through the turnstiles at the exit. Walking into the train station. Walking out of the train station. Walking into the metro station. Walking out of the metro station. Entering the bus. Exiting the bus.
And the opposite way when I go home.
I asked them to delete the entering/exiting data on the secure bicycle parking as it's a free service but they declined as their system couldn't handle manual data removal.
The same system exists for the Dutch public transport (exactly the same cards). Privacy wise you are able to buy an anonymous card with cash. But ... the operators are phasing out machines which are able to accept cash faster than you can find them and they are idiotically expensive if you want to replace them every few weeks as they are tracking you anyways even on the anonymous cards.
Interestingly, in Japan for my short stay there, I found that the Suica card I needed for public transport could only be purchased and recharged with cash.
Not exactly to address your point but they're a good way of tracking individuals so I always try to pay anonymously (cash) and never register it. I should probably buy a new one every few months but usually forget.
FYI anyway. Privacy aside it's a pretty decent system.