RFID Casino Chips 271
scubacuda writes "Could casinos be the next Gillette or Wal-Mart? New Scientist and others report that casinos could soon start using RFID tags to spot counterfeits and thefts, and also to monitor the behaviour of gamblers. Embedded RFID tags should make the chips much harder to counterfeit, and placing tag readers at staff exits could cut down on theft by employees.
(With companies like Infosys helping clients identify and plan pilot RFID projects, we'll no doubt be seeing more and more companies dabbling in this area. Those interested in reading objections to RFID use should check out the position paper issued by CASPIAN, EPIC, Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, Junkbusters, ACLU, Meyda Online, EFF, and PrivacyActivism.)"
Ouch for card counters... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:2)
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:2)
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:5, Insightful)
Having a few readers in the cage to verify authenticity before giving out cash in exchange, would be a much more efficient use of RFID.
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:4, Interesting)
Something that can fail isn't the customers fault...if it was proven otherwise to be genuine.
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:4, Insightful)
Casinos are all about trying to make the customer happy so they can take their money. The minute you go from someone they can make money from to someone they suspect is trying to unfairly take money from them they start playing hardball.
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:4, Insightful)
Anyways, spotting a lone card counter really isn't that hard anyways. To be a really effective counter, your betting levels needs to swing wildely from 10-1 if you're using a hi-lo count, and pit bosses can see it a mile away.
It's team play that is really hard for casinos to spot, like when a spotter can call other people in when a shoe is hot, and they can bet huge.
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:4, Insightful)
In fact, I don't see this as an issue at all. The casino already knows how many chips I buy, they can keep track of how many I win, and I cash them in before I leave.
The real issue with RFIDs is that they can be used to track people over time, and for purposes much different than their announced use. I'd have absolutely no problem with Wal-Mart (or whoever) using RFIDs to track inventory if they were somehow turned off when I purchased the merchandise, somewhat like the magnetic devices that are currently used for anti-theft measures.
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:5, Insightful)
But, most casinos don't allow you to play BJ there is they think you are a counter. I've never heard of a casino being 'advantage' player friendly. If they did, I can only guess they'd have the worst possible game set up...as far as dealer stands, payoffs...shuffle after each deal.
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:5, Interesting)
He had a good point, but the next year I went back and they had installed continuous card shufflers at most of their tables. You can't count cards against these machines since there is no beginning or end to the shoe.
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:3, Insightful)
some people are really good at tracking a shuffle of a normal dealer, i have seen it done before without use of anything but your own brain...you can use some of these same techniques on a continuous shuffler. it is a lot harder than counting though!
and it is a good thing that not everyone counts(successfully) o
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:2)
Oooh, that gives me the best idea.
RFIDs in the cards for blackjack. Then they can reshuffle only when the shoe is getting too friendly.
Is it illegal for the casino to count cards?
Re:Ouch for card counters... (Score:3, Interesting)
In Atlantic City (as far as I remember -- its been awhile), they have to let you play. But they can instruct their dealers to do a lot of things to make your life as a counter quite miserable. Like only work very shallow into the shoe, for starters.
They can also force you to flat-bet (bet the same amount every hand during the shoe), which pretty much defeats the main purpose of card counting.
Well.. (Score:2)
Re:Well.. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Well.. (Score:2)
wont stem employee theft. (Score:5, Interesting)
rfid is not a theft prevention solution for small items.
Re:wont stem employee theft. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:wont stem employee theft. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:wont stem employee theft. (Score:5, Interesting)
I honestly can't think that employee theft of chips is really that huge of an issue since the ammount of money that each cashier has is counted at the end of shift and if you are off enough money to make stealing chips worth it, say $500+ then they will not let you work there long if you are off that much very often. They even went so far as to make us use clear cups with clear liquid in them in the cage so that we could drop things in them.
Dealers are under a lot more scrutiny from the cameras than cashiers. There are dedicated cameras looking at the chips on the table.
At the casino I worked at, chips in the chip bank, (in storage) are supposed to be counted and verified every shift so a theft there would be caught fairly easilly.
When I worked in the cashier cage and was the banker in charge of the cashiers in the cage, it wasn't uncommon to call down to the vault and have half a million dollars in cash delivered. So with that kind of money floating around, if I was going to steal, i wouldn't have been chips. If, as an employee, you are going to steal from the casino, you need to go big becasue if you do it multiple times, you will get caught.
Re:wont stem employee theft. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:wont stem employee theft. (Score:2)
Indeed they do have such ads, I believe they're produced by the Velvet Jones Ad Agency.
Re:wont stem employee theft. (Score:2)
The one I worked for was even "better", every square inch under multiangle video, well, except for the bathrooms of course. I worked in the back office and rarely made it into the actual casino but every nose scratch and testical itch made me self conscious... Maybe you get used to it.
Re:wont stem employee theft. (Score:2)
Tony Soprano ain't got nuttin on Jimmy the Weasel.
I'll let them RFID me... (Score:5, Funny)
I wonder what took them so long... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I wonder what took them so long... (Score:2)
I just got 4th row tickets to see Elton John that way. Last season I got race tickets for pit row. All basically just for losing a couple hundred bucks playing craps
Oh no,! They'll.. wait.. what does this add? (Score:2, Insightful)
Link me to them... (Score:5, Insightful)
I love to go to the casino and play card games like Blackjack or more importantly Craps. Accurate tracking of chips tagged to me would mean two things: accurate comping and the ability to have a technical solution to ensuring payouts are correct.
Those of you who have played craps at a busy table will know what I mean -- the accuracy of your payouts when you win is always in the hands of the "dealer" working your half of the table. I've been payed wrong many times, sometimes in my favor, sometimes not. Sometimes money comes in from bets I forgot I had on the table, sometimes I wonder if I got missed on a payout.
If this means that questioning a missed payout can be more accurate or means at a minimum the casino can see in aggregate when they have someone working the table who consistently makes payout errors, more power to them.
This isn't a privacy issue. If you think you have one spec of anonymity or privacy in a casino, you're nuckin futs.
Re:Link me to them... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Link me to them... (Score:2)
You always have to watch out for yourself, especially as a busy craps table...
Re:Link me to them... (Score:5, Interesting)
People whose gambling experience consists of losing a roll of nickles in a slot machine, don't get it: You don't really want anonymity. You want the casino to know you're there, that you're playing, etc. You want to play in tourneys. You want comps. You want them to know you played, win or lose. If you're not picking up comps, you're missing half the strategy.
You don't want anonymity, you want them to notice you and say "Hello mister TGF, can I get you anything?"
Re:Link me to them... (Score:3, Interesting)
You don't want anonymity
Yes, as long as you're interested in getting the comps. And, most casinos seem to respect their clients desire to be left alone, etc.
I'm not sure how it works when you cash in large quantities of chips (my best craps win was only $500 - a single bet).
But there is a threshhold where the cash transaction becomes reportable to tax authorities. In those instances it would be advantageous to cash-out incrementally to avoid the trigger threshhold.
RFID chips might make this more diffi
Indeed.... (Score:3, Interesting)
On the game. I also made out with 4 beers.
Of course, if I had lost $20, it wouldn't have been a big deal - same I would have paid for the beers had I not been gambling.
Casinos make money off of people who GAMBLE. Those of us who bet the minimum can have a good time on the cheap. After all, even on games that only pay out 95%, if you bet $300/
Re:Link me to them... (Score:4, Interesting)
Excellent point that sums up the whole thing. After all, the entire point of a casino is to prey on peoples' willing suspension of disbelief.
How can anyone who walks in and puts their cash on the table think that the casino companies [lasvegassun.com] aren't going to fleece them from the moment they enter? That those ridiculously overdone venues with their flashing neon lights [allvegasreservations.com] just built themselves out of the Nevada desert [greenworks.tv]?
On the other side of the roulette wheel, you have people who *do* think they can beat the house... the people who buy lottery tickets [txlottery.org] at home in blissful ignorance of the laws of mathematics.
Neither of these groups is going to care about RFID. One group knows that they're entering a fantasy world [tvland.com], and the other wouldn't believe you if you told them [rottentomatoes.com].
Re:Link me to them... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Link me to them... (Score:3, Interesting)
Good point... for all my ranting about mathematics, I still like to play the ponies [lonestarpark.com] on occasion, for the same reason. There is a large enough mass of people who play based on the horses' names, random numbers, or the color of the jockey's silks to overcome the house and state's cut.
In fact, I could be accused of not having a dog in this fight... I've never been to a casino! The closest I've come wa
Re:Link me to them... (Score:2, Interesting)
The best that could be hoped for is to maybe see a flow of chips. What I mean is for example: maybe they see that poker players prefer to play craps and not blackjack while they wait for a poker table to open up. So then the casino could decide to shift some craps tables over near the poker room.
I just don't see ho
Re:Link me to them... (Score:2)
Basically it's an anti-theft device. If I walk into Wal-mart and try to slip stolen, tagged merchandise past the doorway I expect to set off the alarms. I think people trying to slip casino chips out side doors is wrong. Since a chip is money
Re:Link me to them... (Score:4, Interesting)
If casinos starting ratting out the actions of the high rollers, highrollers would just go somewhere else.
I saw an interview with a guy who helps highrollers out (forget the "official name")....
it was deffinatly suggested that not only do the Casinos know about the girls, booze and drugs, in some cases they faciliate it.
In your example, if they found that the high rollers chips were getting spent by a women of questionable employment, they'd probably just check to make sure the high roller was happy with the "Services rendered" and make sure he wasn't robbed.
Re:Link me to them... (Score:3, Insightful)
Ever notice when you're sitting at a blackjack table and the pit boss comes over and asks the dealer how you're doing? If you think this is just about comps, you
Wow (Score:5, Funny)
It's a private business. (Score:4, Insightful)
If you don't like it, you can go to another casino that doesn't use RFID chips. Ain't America grand?
Re:It's a private business. (Score:2)
"As such, they are free to do whatever they like to stem losses, gain advantage over customers, etc."
But they are NOT free to do whatever they like. The business is heavily regulated by the State, especially if you're talking about Nevada. RFID chips are A-Ok, I'm sure, but they are hardly free to do "whatever" they like.
Private property (Score:3, Interesting)
More power to 'em (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:More power to 'em (Score:3, Informative)
As for card counting
Yes, privacy in a casino is highly sought (Score:5, Insightful)
How does this even remotely relate to "your rights"? Casino chips are the equivalent of "disney cash" in theme parks, IE under normal circumstances they are only used within the casino itself. Preventing loss would make the casino more money, and they might even use that to raise your pay tables when you're gaming.
The articles mention monitoring gamblers, but come on... you're in a casino! Your movements are tracked by a hundred cameras from the time you walk in to the time you walk out. Casino employees on the floor are designed to monitor your movement and habits and either 1) ask you to leave or 2) give you a free buffet coupon, depending on what you are doing. You have no privacy whatsoever and very little anonymosity in a casino. Sometimes that works out to your advantage.
Yes, there are bad uses for RFID. I don't see this as being one of them. Next thing you know people will be crying out because a warehouse wants to use RFID on crates for inventory control.
Oh, wait...
Re:Yes, privacy in a casino is highly sought (Score:3, Interesting)
Casinos do NOT lose money by people taking chips. In fact, they encourage it by making their chips flashy, and having periodic "souvenir" designs. Chips cost around $.55 IIRC in bulk (last time I checked many years ago) for a nice design.
Chips often have markings on the edges that are machine-readable, generally used to prevent counterfeiting and for counting.
Casinos are generally more interested in people br
That's it then (Score:3, Funny)
No more Wayne Newton. No more free drinks (except a swig from that bottle of Thunderbird that Louie always has lying around). And not even a remotely comparable level of hookers.
I'm going to go cry now.
Hilarious (Score:4, Insightful)
And also watched by the government gaming commissions closely, lest their gambling license get taken away or worse.
And you're worried about fucking RFID technology in their chips?
Casinos are one of the few places you should absolutely stay away if you are so paranoid like that.
Tracking card counting teams (Score:2)
As well, if you can modify the ID in teh tags from time to time you could also "stale date" chips to stop pro-counters from storing chips for later use in a casino.
This also helps track who is alundering chips by cashing them for teams as well
Casinos will love this! (Score:4, Interesting)
I used to work doing data visualisation for casinos - nice pretty visualisations showing slot machine usage. It was a huge hit with the casinos that used it. Most casinos use customer cards you see - you earn bonus points for awards if you put your card in the reader of the slot machine while you play. That allows the the casino to track your slot machine spending. More importantly it allows you to create visualisations of slot activity broken down by demographics (of course they collect a few personal details when they assign you your awards card...) so that they can better direct promotions, reorganise the slots on the floor (knowing where to place a bank of new slot machines can be worth a few million dollars!) etc.
The big problem was that while you could track turnover volume on the gaming tables, you just couldn't track the movement of players very well - there was just no information on that. With this they can have you swipe your awards card when you collect your chips, then watch those chips disperse about the tables. More importantly they can track the ebb and flow - movement vectors for the chips about the floor - that can be very useful information.
This will be a huge boon to the casino industry, who are always lookign for that new way to fleece a few more dollars of the statistically ignorant.
Jedidiah.
Take out (Score:2)
Missouri laws (Score:3, Interesting)
RFID tags won't be much different. Who cares really?
RFIDs in cows! (Score:2)
I count sheep for a living!
Well actually I am a computer programmer, but the other day I found myself in the middle of a portuguese field counting 596 sheep. I work for the agricultural business, and my latest project involves sheep and cattle with RFID tags in their bellies. The system I work with reads signals from an antenna that detects when the animals pass.
Quite a change from my previous job where I was making stock trading
Idea (Score:2)
Re:Idea (Score:2)
Casinos are already zero-privacy zones anyway (Score:2)
Hacking Las Vegas (Score:2)
Re:Hacking Las Vegas (Score:2)
I'd like to see them use RFID chips on (Score:2)
Find out where they *really* go during "work" hours.
IMO not like Gillette or Wal-Mart. (Score:5, Interesting)
RFIDs can be used for good. My Ford Focus ZTW has a RFID chip on the key. If the correct ID isn't there the car won't (and shouldn't atleast) start. Adding extra keys and programming them is a simple task too.
IMO this shouldn't raise the same concern that the Wal-Mart problem does, which could be a real nightmare.
How dare they!!! (Score:2)
Just another way to track your play (Score:2, Interesting)
Those gamblers smart enough to play with a players card (slot club) so that they can earn comps and get a slight percentage higher in returns know that they're being tracked. Of course, it's easier to do so at the slot machines where the computers can determine your exact coin-in and convert that to a specific number of points to throw into your club account.
At the tables, the casinos still t
Ah, the party line: (Score:5, Insightful)
RFID: Sure there are a few legit uses for the technology, but there are illegitimate uses. BAN IT!
Casino's are instances of organized crime (Score:2)
So, am I suprised they'd use RFID? No, I'm frankly suprised they're s
why play if you can't win? hope it's fun... (Score:3, Interesting)
"Your Rights"? (Score:2, Insightful)
I manage to avoid the surveillance problem and keep all my money by the simple expedient of not entering their establishment.
GOOD for them!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
They're NOT putting these in items you buy, they're NOT using them to track you out the door, and they DO have a very real need to prevent counterfeits. There's increased security for them, and no invasion of privacy for their customers.
Where's the problem here? Geez, between this and the "forged colour mars photos," it MUST be a slow news day.
Oh, wait--both of these were posted by Michael. Interesting...
Whaaaat? (Re:GOOD for them!!!) (Score:3, Insightful)
And why do you think you'll only be tracked while on the casino property? Most people who go to Vegas stay there for several days, and keep their chips with them when they leave the casino for the night, until it's time to go home. They don't cash out
Appropriate use (Score:2)
Harm is only likely when the tags get out the door of a monitored facility while intact and operational. Unlike razor blades in a market, chips are not intended to leave the premises of the casino. Cash 'em in, and you're clean.
As others have pointed out, it's not like a person has any priva
Who'd have thunk it, a legit use (Score:3, Insightful)
That is NOT the case if something is being actually sold to me. Ownership is changing hands at WalMart or wherever you shop, and I don't want something that is becoming MY property to come with auto-tracking mechanisms. If I want an auto-tracking system, I'll damn well install it myself.
But at a casino, what is being sold is entertainment, not poker chips. The chips are on-premesis loaned use, and so tracking those against theft is perfectly legitimate. Ownership is not changing hands, so RFIDs are not infringing on my property or privacy rights.
stand somewhere in a casino w/o being on camera (Score:2)
There is a huge difference (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, if casinos sell souvenir (poker) chips... hopefully those wont have active (rfid) chips in them.
Hell, they should put RFIDs in rental DVD/VHS cases, so they can track down the bastard who hasn't returned that one copy of THX1138.
Actually, inventory departments of companies might do well to RFID their equipment, especially with a wireless network full of floating laptops...
great idea, IMHO (Score:3, Insightful)
in a case like this, this is an excellent use for RFID. protecting your own property by tracking the stuff that's yours using tags that you put in your own stuff is a perfect way to cut down on theft. in a casino, this is especially important. and having an RFID detector when people cash in makes for a good way to make sure the proper amount of money is redeemed.
i still don't want these things in my jeans.It'll make the mugger's lives easier (Score:3, Insightful)
Tax Implications (Score:3, Interesting)
Right now casinos have to report you if you win $1200 or greater on a slot machine, hence the myriad of $1199 jackpots on slots.
In table games they have no reporting requirement (save the $10,000 casino cage transaction report requirement), mostly due to the complexity of tracking wins vs. losses.
If technology makes that simple, does that mean I'll now be taxed on my table game winnings? That the casino will be obligated to report them? Yikes.
Finally... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sure that there's lots of people who are crying "invasoon of privacy", etc, but this is one situation where you truly decided to play by thier rules when you walked through that door, and keeping track of thier own property is in no way an invasion of thier employees or thier customers privacy.
Faraday Cage is the answer (Score:3, Interesting)
Now who will be the new up and coming entreprenure who sells 'chip holders' for all those big spenders who want some privacy?
Cool. More efficiency in mugging (Score:3, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This actually seems like a good use of RFID (Score:2)
Re:This actually seems like a good use of RFID (Score:2)
Sort of, but thanks to the nightmare of "accounting for a gaming industry" it's actually more profitable to just hoover the money out of them - it's much less headache that way.
Re:This actually seems like a good use of RFID (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not like they'll be tracking you with their chips at the grocery store.
No, they'll be tracking you at the tables. "Comps" are bestowed based on how much money you wager. If the chips are associated with you when they're sold, then they can track where and when you wagered it and comp you accordingly.
Re:This actually seems like a good use of RFID (Score:4, Insightful)
So, say you have a really good night...you cash out $9999, walk out with the rest...cash it out in small doses over time so you stay under the $10K radar. That way, all cash.....hard to track that.
Re:That's too stupid (Score:2)
Re:That's too stupid (Score:2)
Re:That's too stupid (Score:4, Interesting)
If, as you seem to suggest, you compile a list of valid ID numbers, they can still get you because they could store data on where the chip is located. If the computer tells the cashier that half the chips you're turning in are supposed to be in the vault, you're busted.
Re:Great idea, needs help (Score:2)
Re:Ouch for shitty dealers (Score:2)
Hell, that was trackable way before computers, let alone RFID tags...
Re:Suck if the RFID broke on your $1000 chip... (Score:2)
however if it's not their chip, they have no right to confiscate it. if they do try to confiscate it, i'd have them call authorities (police, and not the RIAA "police"), file a police report acusing me of some crime and let the police take the chip as evidence of some crime they are acusing me of.
i'm sure the chip would have been conveniently lost by
Re:wireless RFID hacking? (Score:2)
Re:I don't understand gambling (Score:3, Insightful)