Thanks for your reply Darth Vader, but I think you are slightly missing the point.
‘Blame your fellow travelers’ is neither a coherent or judicious solution, and is exactly the kind of response that will antagonise the honest fare paying customer. I don't think any business, not even TFL, would officially take that line…
TFL can only get away with this kind of thing because it has a monopoly on London public transport. There is no other choice. This is why sites like this are set up - to protect the consumer when they have no other options.
The way that TFL automatically fines it’s customers without notifying them is comparable to unfair
bank charges – it’s just that oyster is a more recent invention and a real discussion of its problems hasn’t yet gathered momentum.
The fact is this problem is a design / software infrastructure issue that can be solved.
For example, the fines don’t have to be deducted immediately but could be stored and paid when the card is next ‘topped up’. This way the user would at least be aware they have been charged and can argue the point before the money is actually transferred.
The following article looks at the software failure aspect of the oyster system in some detail:
The Oyster Gotcha - Software Reality
The other objection I have to your response is your assumption that it was my fault for incurring charges. You say there is ‘no excuse not to touch in or out’.
If I were to simply forget to touch in or out I would have much less problem paying the fine.
In reality, the times I have been fined leaving Finsbury park have all been technical problems.
Once I can only assume was during a power cut when there were no lights on in the station and none of the machines worked.
Another time it must have been a hardware error because all the machines read ‘out of order’ (or something like that).
And there were other countless times I tapped ‘out’ and it registered as ‘in’. This seemed to happen every time I travelled home from my girlfriend’s house, so there must have been some software / technical glitch regarding that particular journey. (And yes I did ‘tap in’ because they have barriers at that station).
It happened again the other night at Bethnal green when (contrary to what the guy on the gate told me) it turned out the trains on the central line had been suspended. I was charged £1 for just entering and exiting the station. Now I have to decide whether it is worth calling the help-line, which will probably cost more than £1 on my phone bill.
If you take into account the 2.67 million other people who use the tube, TFL must be making huge amounts of money from these
unfair charges.