- Joined
- Aug 5, 2005
- Messages
- 170
Peripart said:I'm not aware that any PIN ever begins with a zero.
Err--I know of at least one that does.
Peripart said:I'm not aware that any PIN ever begins with a zero.
I said:There's always one awkward bugger, isn't there?lupinwick said:Mine does.Why (assuming that the world needs a cashpoint "panic button") don't they just fix it so that hitting "0" before your PIN alerts the authorities whilst still dispensing cash? I'm not aware that any PIN ever begins with a zero.
Then Moooksta said:Awkward bugger number two raises hand.
Why not just fit a Panic button?
I make that three!...and [i:24t3eq59]then[/i] synchronicity said:Err--I know of at least one that does.Peripart said:I'm not aware that any PIN ever begins with a zero.
Xanatico said:Well if you write it down like that it´s your own fault.
Frobush said:Though my secret personal PIN number is easy for me (and only me) to remember - it's the year I was born!
methinks in the USA rounders mutated into baseball.placeholder said:ROUNDERS??? they used to make us play that in school but with a tennis racket i think we would have been better off bringing back nuns and embroidery classes.
do adults play rounders?
'Yellow box' plan to beat muggers
Yellow lines are to be painted on the pavement around cash machines across the UK in a Home Office initiative to reduce the number of muggings.
Home Office minister Vernon Coaker said the so-called "privacy spaces" were a "simple common sense" measure that had been shown to cut crime.
The job of painting the lines will be given to young offenders.
The government is under pressure to tackle street crime after figures last month showed it was on the rise.
"Pilots have shown that 'privacy spaces' can reduce crime at bank machines and we're working with industry to roll these out," said Mr Coaker.
He said the boxes, which will be partly funded by High Street banks through their APACS payment association, made it easier for potential victims to spot robbers encroaching on their space.
Guidance on the "design and installation" of the boxes has been developed jointly by the Home Office, Local Government Association and APACS, the Home Office said in a statement.
Sandra Quinn, director of communications at APACS, said: "A marked out zone around a cash machine may not seem like much of a deterrent, but the evidence points to a reduction in fraud coupled with a greater sense of security for cash machine users.
"The vast majority of cash machine withdrawals take place crime free and the privacy space initiative will help to reduce this type of crime even further."
A 2003 pilot scheme by Greater Manchester Police found offences within 150 metres of cash machines with privacy spaces went down by 66% compared with a reduction of 34% within 150 metres of those without, the Home Office said.
The government has been under pressure to do more to tackle robberies after figures last month showed the risk of being a victim of crime is rising at the fastest rate in more than 10 years.
Robberies went up by 1% according to recorded crime figures for July to September 2006, while the widely-respected British Crime Survey suggested they had gone up by 14%.
But Mr Coaker said "people should feel safer now" because "violent crime have fallen by over a third in the last nine years and the risk of being a victim is at a historic low".
He said the government was working with industry to reduce street crime and had also secured a renewed pledge from mobile phone operators to meet their target of blocking stolen phones.
The Local Government Association is recommending offenders on community sentences, under supervision of the Youth Offending Team or on probation, should be given the job of painting the "privacy spaces".
Story from BBC NEWS:
Published: 2007/02/08 15:47:10 GMT
© BBC MMVII
They've got some of those here, in the centre of town.WhistlingJack said:
stuneville said:The ones I've seen are about a metre (3 ft ish) across, and about 1.5 m (4'6") long. Not much, true, but it does mean nobody is literally looking over your shoulder.
That said, they're all overlooked by CCTV cameras and within spitting distance of the central Police station.
Do people really stand that close to others when waiting for a bank machine? Here the unspoken rule is at least 5-6 feet.
Just because it's patented doesn't mean it works. Ideas are patented, regardless of whether or not they work.OldTimeRadio said:Frobush said:Amazing. It obviously can't work (as discussed posts passim).
But there is nothing unworkable about the idea. It's simply not used. That's quite a difference!
Snopes says:
Such a system was....patented in 1998 by Joseph Zingher, a Chicago businessman. His SafetyPin System would alert police that a crime was in progress when a cardholder at an ATM keyed in the reverse of his personal identification numbers....Zingher's system included work-arounds for [palindromic] numeric combinations.
OldTimeRadio said:Oh? Try patenting a perpetual motion machine, at least in the United States. Please keep me informed of your progress.
ArthurASCII said:National Geographic says something similar has been done...