I was wondering, when travelling on GTR with KeyGo, which of the following can an inspector see when you tap your card against their device on a train:
1. If there is a railcard attached.
2. If you have tapped in or not.
3. Where you tapped in.
4. When you tapped in.
5. Your journey/payment history.
And if they could see numbers 2-4, would a lack of touch in warrant a penalty fare or not, considering this could be very much down to a system error, of which there seem to be a fair few with this system?
Does what they can see depend on whether they are an RPI or just a regular OBS or conductor for example?
Thanks.
1. Generally no, but if they look up the card number on a separate system, then yes.
2. Yes. The smartcard stores something called a "transient ticket" which tracks where you last tapped in and where you tap out. This only stores the last tap in/out, and a tap in usually removes any previous tap out info, too.
3. Yes, see above.
4. Yes, see above.
5. As per 1, only if they look up the card on a separate system to what is used as part of the standard RPI checks.
And if they could see numbers 2-4, would a lack of touch in warrant a penalty fare or not, considering this could be very much down to a system error, of which there seem to be a fair few with this system?
No, because this tap info is stored on the card as well as on the backend system. Even if the communication between the backend and the readers is faulty, the tap in would still be recorded on the card itself.
You can scan the card yourself with the free Ecebs Smart Ticket Scanner app on iOS and Android to see the transient ticket info. This is all RPIs and OBSes generally see unless they really want to go deep with their checking.
The only time I've had my card looked up was when it wouldn't let me leave a station, but the system was broken that day and the staff member couldn't load my card details! If they wanted to look up these details, they would scan the barcode on the back of the card with their GTR-issued tablets which would show your account and Key info from the backend system.
Does what they can see depend on whether they are an RPI or just a regular OBS or conductor for example?
Both are issued with the relevant kit to check both systems, as far as I am aware, but whether they are trained to use them is another question.