[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Smartcard report from Nando.Net
Anyone know anything else about this? Like any privacy protections (I
doubt it), counterfeiting protections, etcetera?
Thanks,
-Allen
Copyright © 1996 Nando.net
Copyright © 1996 Bloomberg
LONDON (Feb 12, 1996 11:23 a.m. EST) -- Motorola Inc. said it won two
contracts to supply microchips for smart cards that will be used by
the governments of Spain and the Czech Republic to administer benefit
programs.
The cards are credit-card sized devices incorporating
specially-designed memory chips, called microcontrollers. They have a
growing number of applications and can be used instead of cash in
stores, at telephone booths, for pay-television and computer-shopping.
The largest demand, though, will come from government agencies, like
Spain's Social Security Administration and the Czech Republic's
Healthcare Ministry. China, with a population of 1.2 billion, is
considering a national identification card using this technology, said
Waqar Qureshi, Motorola worldwide marketing manager for smart-card
chips.
[...]
Spain has ordered 7 million microprocessors, valued at more than $10
million, from Motorola in the first phase of a nationwide program that
could grow to 40 million cards. The chips will store the digitized
description of the holders' fingerprints, which should help to reduce
fraud.
"The smart cards will enable multiple transactions with the Social
Security to be carried out in a more secure manner and their use can
easily be extended to other services," said a spokesman for the
Spanish Social Security Ministry, quoted in a Motorola statement.
In the Czech Republic, Motorola is supplying 10,000 chips for a pilot
health-insurance program in the Litomerice region. A countrywide
health-card project for 10 million people is planned for introduction
starting in 1997.
[...]
"These two contracts, valued at tens of millions of dollars, are prime
examples of the growing trend among governments across the world to
look at smartcard solutions in the administration of public social
services and benefits," said Allan Hughes, Motorola's worldwide
smartcard manager.
Visa Spain said in December it would launch smart cards to replace the
use of cash for transactions as small as buying a pack of cigarettes.
With software written in Spanish that already is being used in Miami,
Colombia and Argentina, Visa Spain said it intends to place as many as
3 million "Visa Cash" cards a year in circulation in Spain this year.