FeliCa

FeliCa

FeliCa is a contactless RFID smart card system from Sony in Japan, primarily used in electronic money cards. The name stands for Felicity Card. First utilized in the Octopus card system in Hong Kong,[1] the technology is used in a variety of cards also in countries such as Singapore, Japan and the United States.

Contents

Technology

A defaced FeliCa (EZ-Link) card, revealing its internal circuitry.

FeliCa's encryption key is dynamically generated each time mutual authentication is performed, preventing fraud such as impersonation.

FeliCa is externally powered, i.e. it does not need a battery to operate. The card uses power supplied from the special FeliCa card reader when the card comes in range. When the data transfer is complete, the reader will stop the supply of power.

FeliCa was proposed for ISO/IEC 14443 Type C but was rejected. However, ISO/IEC 18092 (Near Field Communication) uses some similar modulation methods. It uses Manchester coding at 212 kbit/s in the 13.56 MHz range. A proximity of 10 centimeters or less is required for communication.

FeliCa complies with JIS: X6319-4: Specification of implementation for integrated circuit(s) cards - Part 4: High speed proximity cards. The standard is regulated by JICSAP (Japan IC Card System Application Council) [1]

The UK IT security evaluation and certification scheme provides more detail as to the internal architecture of the FeliCa card (RC-S860 ). FeliCa IC card (hardware) and its operating system has obtained ISO15408 Evaluation Assurance Level 4 (“EAL4”), a standard which indicates the security level of information technology and consumer products.

FeliCa is also included as a condition of the NFC Forum Specification Compliance.[2]

The next generation of FeliCa IC chip announced in June 2011 will have enhanced security adopting the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) encryption. [3] Sony claims the next generation chip will have a higher performance, reliability and lower power consumption. [4]

Reliability

FeliCa supports simultaneous access of up to 8 blocks (1 block is 16 bytes). If an IC card is moved outside of the power-supplied area during the session, the FeliCa card automatically discards incomplete data to restore the previous state.

Mobile FeliCa

Mobile FeliCa is a modification of FeliCa for use in mobile phones by FeliCa Networks[2], a subsidiary company of both NTT DoCoMo and Sony. DoCoMo has developed a wallet phone concept based on Mobile FeliCa and has developed a wide network of partnerships and business models. au and SoftBank (former Vodafone Japan) have also licensed mobile FeliCa from FeliCa Networks.

The Osaifu-Keitai (おサイフケータイ?) system (literal translation: "wallet-phone") was developed by NTT DoCoMo, and introduced in July 2004 and later licensed to Vodafone and au, which introduced the product in their own mobile phone ranges under the same name. Using Osaifu-Keitai, multiple FeliCa systems (such as Suica and Edy) can be accessed from a single mobile phone. On January 28, 2006, au introduced Mobile Suica which is used primarily on the railway networks owned by JR East.

Consumer reader/writer devices

Sony "PaSoRi" RC-S320 Contactless IC Card Reader/Writer

Sony has built a FeliCa reader/writer known as "FeliCa Port" into their VAIO PC line. Using the device, FeliCa cards can be used over the Internet for shopping and charging FeliCa cards.

An external USB FeliCa PC reader/writer has been released as well, called PaSoRi. It is USB powered and allows one to perform online transactions and top up EZ-link cards in Singapore with credit cards or debit cards anywhere, as long as there is direct access to the Internet.

Card usage

Integrated services in Japan

As FeliCa is the de facto smart card ticketing system standard in Japan, many of these cards have integrated services. A particular region/operator may accept multiple cards.

The table below shows the integrated services FeliCa cards have for each Japanese region.

A: The area accepts all functions of the card, including electronic money function. (There may be subtle differences between each area.)
B: The area accepts basic functions of the card, but not some functions such as electronic money or auto recharging.
A: The area will introduce the new card in future.
F: The area will accept the card in future.
Area Operator 1 Suica PASMO ICOCA PiTaPa TOICA SUGOCA Others
Kitami Hokkaidō Kitami Bus A (Bus Card)
Sapporo JR Hokkaidō B A (Kitaca)
Sapporo CTB A (SAPICA)
Sendai JR East A
Niigata
Niigata Kotsu A (RYUTO)
Toyama Toyama Light Rail A (passca)
Ishikawa Hokuriku Railroad A (ICa)
Greater Tokyo Area JR East A A B F B A A (Kitaca)
Private operators
Tōkyū Setagaya Line B B A (Setamaru)
Yamanashi Yamanashi Kōtsū A (Bus IC Card)
Shizuoka Shizutetsu Group B A A (LuLuCa)
Entetsu Group A (NicePass)
JR Central B   B A B
Greater Nagoya  
Meitetsu, TBC Nagoya, Toyotetsu F F A (Manaca)
Kintetsu F B A
Area Operator 1 Suica PASMO ICOCA PiTaPa TOICA SUGOCA Others
Osaka-​Kobe-​Kyoto JR West B A B B B
Private operators F B A
Nara Kōtsū A (CI-CA)
Itami CTB A (Itappy)
Shinki Bus   A (NicoPa)
Okayama  
Private operators A (Hareca)
JR West B   A B B B
Hiroshima  
Private operators B A (PASPY)
Kagawa Kotoden Group A (IruCa)
Ehime Iyo Railway A (IC e-card)
Fukuoka Nishitetsu A A A (nimoca) A (Hayakaken) [4]
JR Kyūshū B B B (nimoca)
Fukuoka CTB
Kitakyūshū CTB A (Himawari Bus Card)
Nagasaki Private operators A (Nagasaki Smart Card)
Oita Oita Bus, Oita Kōtsū, Kamenoi Bus A A A (Mejiron nimoca)
Miyazaki Miyazaki Kōtsū A (Miyakō Busca)
Kagoshima Kagoshima CTB A (RapiCa) A (Iwasaki IC Card)
Iwasaki Group
Area Operator Suica PASMO ICOCA PiTaPa TOICA SUGOCA Others
A few cards can be used as electronic money in some unmarked areas.
1: In many cases, there are multiple operators accepting the same card in the same area. See each card article for the full listing.

Notes

  1. ^ Sony Global - FeliCa
  2. ^ http://www.nfc-forum.org/resources/faqs#h
  3. ^ http://www.japantoday.com/category/technology/view/sony-to-launch-next-generation-felica-contactless-ic-chip
  4. ^ http://www.sony.net/SonyInfo/News/Press/201106/11-066E/index.html
  5. ^ http://www.blackboard.com/About-Bb/Media-Center/Press-Releases/Archive.aspx?releaseid=1073992

External links


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