Urban Transport

UK rail operators eye biometric ticketing future

Recent advances in biometrics suggest that eye-scans replacing physical train tickets is not beyond the realm of possibility
phakimata/Depositphotos
Recent advances in biometrics suggest that eye-scans replacing physical train tickets is not beyond the realm of possibility
phakimata/Depositphotos

Britain's railway industry has moved to make life easier for future commuters, laying out a roadmap to modernize its transport systems for the digital era. The strategy includes connected trains that communicate to avoid congestion and more frictionless gate entry through a Bluetooth-connected smartphone, and possibly one day, eye and fingerprint scanning.

The Rail Delivery Group, the body that represents Britain's passenger train companies, laid out the blueprint noting three key areas where technology can make things easier for passengers. One of these is a type of seat design that is claimed to allow 20 to 30 percent more seats in each carriage, along with another that changes its configuration during peak times to make space for 15 to 20 percent more seats. These will be built into existing trains this year.

Intelligent trains comprise a second area, which are self-regulating rail cars that will communicate with each other as a way of autonomously minimizing conflicts at junctions. The idea is that this will allow more frequent trips and fewer delays, and the UK government has committed £450 million (US$562 million) to trial a new signaling technology to that end.

But where things really get interesting is in the replacement of physical tickets. Trials will kick off later in the year on a line between Oxford and London where passengers can use an app and the Bluetooth signals in their smartphones to open the gate. According to the Rail Delivery Group, this could eventually be replaced by biometric technologies such as fingerprint or iris-scanning.

We have reached out for more details on how far along these solutions are exactly and are yet to hear back, but recent advances suggest that they might not be all that far off. Last year Mastercard announced plans to allow customers to make payments with selfies (seriously), while many of today's flagship smartphones can be unlocked with a fingerprint. Meanwhile, facial recognition is already in use at some of Britain's airports, and Australia is looking to use the technology in place of passports for 90 percent of its airport arrivals.

Source: The Rail Delivery Group

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3 comments
Fretting Freddy the Ferret pressing the Fret
Iris-scanning? Minority Report also predicted this in the future. Along with electric vehicles, personal advertisements, and more.
TheAnalyst
It would be very cheap to put a national level RFID in a anklet and make it mandatory to wear in public. Sensors put underground can be used to read/write those RFID and interface with national payment gateway and national people location system and accordingly charge amounts. The same system can track persons with criminal records or fugitives. The sensors at public places would blow a siren when a person without or invalid RFID passes through a gate.
EUbrainwashing
Civil liberties stand as a defence from whatever future holds. To assure an enduringly free society the balance must always be; government must trust people and not demand legislation that requires the people to trust government.