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Australian Bank's System Outage Leaves 9 Million Customers Without Cash (reuters.com)

An anonymous reader quotes Reuters: National Australia Bank on Saturday suffered what it described as a "nationwide outage" to some of its technology systems, leaving customers unable to access banking services or withdraw money. Customers took to social media to vent their frustrations, with some saying they were left unable to pay for groceries or refuel their cars...

National Australia Bank is one of Australia's four largest retail banks with a customer base of 9 million, according to its website... The Bank of New Zealand, a NAB subsidiary, also experienced outages on Saturday across New Zealand, but the spokesman was unable to confirm a connection between the two incidents.

132 comments

  1. Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Always carry cash, and two different types of credit cards. I have a visa, mastercard and $200 cash on me, plus bank cards. Enough for some gas, food or a cheap hotel if needed.

    1. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just use wechat or alipay.

    2. Re:Always carry cash by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 5, Funny

      Always carry cash, and two different types of credit cards. I have a visa, mastercard and $200 cash on me, plus bank cards

      I always carry a Smith and Wesson. With one of those, I find I can get as much cash, credit cards, and jewellery and watches as I want.

    3. Re:Always carry cash by bn-7bc · · Score: 1

      Well unless you are in the us it willallso get you asrayn the local jail, and a criminal record, tho your milage may wary

    4. Re:Always carry cash by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 2

      I generally carry more, in both dollar terms and number of credit cards. However, this is of limited utility when a merchant’s payment processor goes down— you might be ok for now, but how long can you last? In an emergency, even a liberal amount of cash can go quickly. The systems today really aren’t sufficiently robust to handle the contingencies.

    5. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you get free board and meals at the Club Fed hotel every time.

    6. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You tell me Tardchris, you're the one with goats on the brain these days, How's the DMCA takedown business?

    7. Re:Always carry cash by Mistakill · · Score: 1

      I am in New Zealand and was affected because one of my 2 banks is BNZ.

      I only found out I was affected because I tried to buy something on steam, and my debit card was declined (weird because I knew I had funds in it).
      I checked my banking app and it wouldnt show the live balance, and came up with a weird error when I tried to login... Couple of hours later it was back to normal, just was glad I out wasnt buying petrol or groceries

    8. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      chris always carry silver coins with him. I know I used to be his wife!

      There you are goat posting with yet another fake account, you revenue stream hogging disgusting fat sexist tube of lard, Christopher Dale Reimer!

      You can be sure I will be watching this fake account too. I know this is you because you told me you were working on your freepass 11 file server and you are so dumb that you can't even masquerade yourself properly.

      Now, I told you I was out of meds last week and you didn't even care to contact me you lazy fucker.

      How many times do I have to express the emergency of the situation??????

      The python click script you wrote for my pheromone revenue stream web site suddenly stopped to work!!!!!!

      You fucking incompetent python script writer!!!

      When it works, I get 4000+ clicks a day on my pheromone revenue stream web site but only 5 or 6 without it!!!!

      Now, it seems like you dont care and that you have abandoned me you heartless fucking pig!

      Bonus:
      Here is a story that creimer told me when convincing me what a hard life he had:

      The tree was him and the tree knot was his butt hole!

      So, his uncle packed his fat ass with lard and with his cock! Not that it makes much of a difference but anyway, there it is!

      Signed:
      Ethell, The girl that used to love you and now hates you, burn in hell where you belong you sexist pig!

    9. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming, of course, he haven't already..

      What a fucking retard who pretends to be an author but doesn't even know the verb to have!

      CROFLOL!

    10. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You can find him at YouTube."

      I can also find him at UA-Video, right Tardchris?

      "Assuming, of course, he haven't already banned you from his channel."

      Your crammar gives you away, Tardchris. Whenever you get a bit rattled or flustered, you start making crammar mistakes.

      I guess if you ban me, I can find your rancid sewer feces over at UA-Video?

      Better protect your copyright or risk losing it!

    11. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming, of course, he haven't already banned you from his channel.

      Chris, if you bar everyone that goes to your channel to laugh at you then, you will sure end up with 0 subscribers.

    12. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *** Chris, contact me ASAP please. I have AI click bots that don't get detected by youtube algorythm! :) -2 subscribers and 10 views a day for you is sad.. -love granny XX ***

      Dear Team Creimer,

      I just noticed that the Humpty-Dumpty video has 435+ millions views, that should make you salivate!

      I have plenty of ideas to make the views on your own youtube channel skyrocket but you didn't contact me yet. Is it because I am a lady? Ethell says that you are sexist but I hope it isn't true.

      Anyway, I will give you a free hint anyway: Dress-up as Humpty in your videos, you shouldn't need that much makeup making this a money saving situation in your own case.

      My YouTube channel has 222K subscribers and many videos with hundreds of thousands of views:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      Now, with some slight adjustments, I think that together, we could make the view count skyrocket on your very own Team Creimer youtube channel :)

      Please feel confident to contact me if you want me to coach you, we aren't living so far away from each other so we could even easily meet.

      Love XX,

      --
      -Granny

    13. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come on Granny! leave Chris alone please!

      It seems like Chris is a victim here. He keeps on reading those SEO, youtube algorithm, basically get rich quick sites. He doesn't realize that he is the fish for them since they make money off him with their own schemes. Then, he wastes his time trying to implement what those sites suggest and he ends up disturbing people.

      I mean, those crooks tell Chris that he has to build personal brands and he goes on the Internet and makes everything about himself public!

      I believe we should bring this up at our next meeting. He might not be our only patient victim of such on-line abuse.

      --
      Silvia Bunge
      Psychology Department
      University of California, Berkeley

    14. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly Nancy!

      We, at Special Education for the Santa Clara County Office of Education, couldn't agree more with you!

      For the valuable /. users that might already have read the following, please note that there is an important update.

      IMPORTANT UPDATE:
      Special Education for the Santa Clara County Office of Education has invested money to buy Chris a new chair:
      http://www.keynamics.com/image...

      Information about Christopher Dale Reimer and autistic people:

      Autistic people have obsessions about things normal people don't care. For example, one of our autistic patient went haywire when he realized that there was a penny missing in his pocket change.

      To calm him down, one of our educator pretended to have found it on the floor and gave a penny to him.

      The autistic patient condition went even worse because he realized it wasn't the same penny!

      Chris has an obsession with budgeting every penny. He doesn't understand that most people do not budget to the penny and have a flexible amount they allow for miscellaneous items.

      I am Nancy Guerrero and I am Director of Special Education for the Santa Clara County Office of Education. We use Chris' (a.k.a. creimer,cdreimer) picture in our document because he is the hardest case we have ever had to handle:
      http://www.sccoe.org/depts/stu...

      Our artists were inspired by the low carb diet that Christopher follows scrupulously for the small lunch box and by the picture linked below for the rest. I am sure that you will notice the similarities such as the bump on the side of his chest and more:
      https://ibb.co/gVad65

      Please be easy on Christopher although, I am aware that some of our staff handling Chris post joke comments here and obvoiusly, the Santa Clara County Office of Education disapprove that behavior vehemently:
      http://ibb.co/mRVSaG

      But it isn't Chris' fault if he is the way he is. We do the best we can do with him and he is partially integrated into society. We try to cure his abnormal need for attention but he is kind of stubborn and won't listen to anybody.

      Thank You dear users,
      -Nancy Guerrero

    15. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Poor creimy, everything is going to heck now...

      Creimy Dumpty sat on the wall,
      Creimy Dumpty had a great fall.
      All the king's horses
      And all the king's men
      Couldn't put Creimy Dumpty
      Together again.

      Creimy-Dumpty official video by CVS (435M views, 12M subscribers):
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      Chris: here is an IQ test for you: please tell us what is the difference between the first half and the second half of the video?

      P.S. That video is really funny anyway, it's like watching you stumbling over and over again. Of course, with 435,000,000+ views and 12,000,000+ subscribers, it is in a different ball park than the one you are used to be into.

    16. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As an expat, someone (rich) once asked me why I carry usd200+(1 months wages in that country), this is why.

    17. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      That's why I drive a tank. Now my cards and $200 cash are safe even from the likes of you. Ha, take that!

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    18. Re: Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at Mr prepared over here, real men use the decentralized bitcoin which can't be hacked for $500, you're going to need a few trillion, good luck Russia.

    19. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. Never carry cash. Keep physical cash at home and out-of-sight.

      If you're out on the road use your cards, and if the system is down, use the ye old mechanical imprinter.

    20. Re:Always carry cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thus making yourself a willing victim.

      If you keep cash, keep it at home and out of sight. Because if people become aware that you're carrying cash, you are guaranteed to be a victim in an actual emergency.

      That bottle of water may cost $1, but during an emergency that goes up to $100. You may buy it, but what about 50 other kids that want water? You wave that money around and you become the first victim.

      The bank network outage is a temporary thing, and you can do without it for an entire day. An extended outage, say from a nuclear bomb/EMP weapon, your cash isn't going to save you.

  2. Here is a better source by El+Cubano · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Reuters article is lacking details. news.com.au has a story with more details.

    It appears that their payment processing was down too. So, not just retail customers with accounts at NAB, but also merchants who use them for payment processing were not able to accept payments. The article I read does not state that clearly, but the taxi patron seemed to complain that it was the inability of the cabbie to accept a card payment that was the problem, rather than that his own individual card did not work.

    It sucks when you are the customer and the service fails, but moreso when you are the collateral damage.

    1. Re:Here is a better source by dwywit · · Score: 1

      It seems that the backup voucher system was forgotten.

      Unless the banks have withdrawn that - you used to be able to fill out a paper voucher for later processing when the EFTPOS was down.

      --
      They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
    2. Re:Here is a better source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they're no longer smart enough to fill out a form...

      bank employees are one (small) step above an ATM now. soon to be replaced.

      they can't do anything. they can't help you. hell most banks can't even count chage anymore!

    3. Re: Here is a better source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It seems that the backup voucher system was forgotten.

      Unless the banks have withdrawn that - you used to be able to fill out a paper voucher for later processing when the EFTPOS was down.

      No, there was never a paper voucher system for EFTPOS. It relies totally on electronic authorization that funds exist and got transferred.

      Perhaps you're thinking of the credit card backup vouchers? That relies on the trust inherent in credit (and not debit) cards.

    4. Re: Here is a better source by dwywit · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes - that's what I was thinking of.

      But IIRC EFT terminals have the ability to store transactions and send later. I've seen that very statement on EFT displays: "Sending stored transactions" although that would tend to revert to a "trust" system, but there's nothing to stop the bank reversing the transaction later, or just putting the account holder's balance into the red if there's insufficient funds.

      --
      They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
    5. Re: Here is a better source by thesupraman · · Score: 1

      Pretty much exactly no sorry, the whole basis of EFTPOS is online verification.
      they could do that for (older) credit card transactions, but certainly not for EFTPOS, with which online verification is a designed in requirement.

    6. Re: Here is a better source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, there was a paper-based system here in New Zealand that allowed you to sign for a limited transaction amount. Also, the snafu also took out the BNZ here, which is owned by the bank in Aussie.

    7. Re: Here is a better source by Kapiti+Kid · · Score: 1

      I had my BNZ credit card declined when I was trying to order online. That was a real scare. Managed to complete the transaction by doing direct transfer of funds from another bank. Online purchases are really the only time I use a credit card. Not many people use credit cards for purchases in NZ shops, and if you do you're likely to be hit with a surcharge. That's because of the high per-transaction cost to the retailer, compared with EFTPOS which is a fixed per-month cost.

    8. Re: Here is a better source by Drishmung · · Score: 1
      The paper system kicks in when the terminal says "CAN'T CONNECT", or something similar. But only one bank was affected. Customers of other banks were OK. So merchants just thought the customer had insufficient funds. Of course, after a while it might start be become suspicious.

      Consider yourself in a taxi at the airport, about to board a flight, and all of a sudden you have no way to pay for the fare. Unless you have multiple cards WITH DIFFERENT BANKS, you have a problem.

      --
      Protoplasm. Quiet Protoplasm. I like quiet protoplasm.
    9. Re: Here is a better source by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      Not if you carry cash like any freedom-loving human being should.

    10. Re: Here is a better source by Alumoi · · Score: 1

      Consider yourself in a taxi at the airport, about to board a flight, and all of a sudden you have no way to pay for the fare. Unless you have multiple cards WITH DIFFERENT BANKS, you have a problem.

      Just pull out your wallet and pay cash. Oh, wait, you're one of those card only people.
      Well then, I have something to say to you: MUAHAHAHAHA

    11. Re: Here is a better source by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Consider yourself in a taxi at the airport, about to board a flight, and all of a sudden you have no way to pay for the fare.

      I think the bigger issue would be all the armed TSA agents surrounding your cab following it's rampage through the terminal building.

      Unless you have multiple cards WITH DIFFERENT BANKS, you have a problem.

      In this case that might not have helped either; many people were unable to pay because the merchant (or taxi) systems relied on a connection to the bank. If the driver can't accept CC transactions then it doesn't matter how many cards you have.

      These kinds of things are fairly easily resolved even without cash, though; you show him your ID so he can get your name and address, sign an IOU, exchange phone numbers, and sort out payment later. If he doesn't agree to that, feel free to leave; you've made an honest effort to pay and there's nothing left to do.

    12. Re: Here is a better source by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      You mean those things with the carbon paper and the slider that disappeared after WW1?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    13. Re: Here is a better source by reboot246 · · Score: 2

      Imagine what would happen if cash were eliminated from your country. That's the goal of the financial industry and the goal of some governments.

    14. Re:Here is a better source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No problem, just call an uber... oh wait.

    15. Re: Here is a better source by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Hopefully, then the far-right Christian crowd will start a revolt. i.e. "it's the mark of the Beast!"

    16. Re: Here is a better source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The far-right is already revolting and has always been revolting.

      It wouldn't be so bad if they kept it amongst themselves, but they insist on forcing their ridiculous beliefs on the rest of us. Just like that middle-east crowd they complain so much about. ...and how the hell did your comment get modded up like that? Who are you paying off?

    17. Re: Here is a better source by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      I'm far from a far rightist. Just saying that superstitions have their uses.

  3. The solution: Go cashless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Because progress!

    Me, I tend to keep a bit of a cash reserve. But then I'm backward and old-fashioned like that.

    1. Re:The solution: Go cashless by thesupraman · · Score: 1, Troll

      But your life becomes SO much BETTER when the corporations and government can track every single transaction you make, where and when it was, for how much, and to whom, and it is only able to be completed if they allow it.

      Think of the children!

    2. Re:The solution: Go cashless by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      Any outage that can affect ATMs could also mess with credit card verification. At least if people hold cash, those that have cash can still transact.

  4. There's a lesson here by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Your emergency supplies - which you surely have - should include some cash.

    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    1. Re:There's a lesson here by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Your emergency supplies - which you surely have - should include some cash.

      No. The lesson here is your business should have a business continuity plan. That may involve cash, it may not.

      I remember a few years ago when Commbank's payment system went down. I found out about it after I had filled my car and went to pay. I didn't have cash. What I did do was hand over my drivers license, the store clerk took down my details as well as a receipt and basically said if I don't settle the debt in 48 hours he'll forward my details to the police.

      Done. Simple. No cash required.

      Why is this even relevant when cash is an alternative? Because there are plenty of places in the world moving to cashless businesses.

      Cash is a promise of value. There are alternatives even when the power goes out.

  5. and when you go to an store that does not take cas by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 3, Funny

    and when you go to an store that does not take cash>

  6. It's called, cutting a check by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or does it not have this feature yet?

    1. Re:It's called, cutting a check by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Checks? How gauche.

    2. Re: It's called, cutting a check by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You only need to find a shop that accepts them and a bank that issues them. Also, you will probably need to explain what a cheque is to everyone under 40 while finding out that there is no shop that accepts them.

  7. Re:and when you go to an store that does not take by dwywit · · Score: 1

    Yep - all those hipster cafes that have signs up saying "EFTPOS only - no cash".

    I wonder if they suddenly decided cash was OK after all?

    --
    They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
  8. Gas money car, more in safe at home. Lost wallet by raymorris · · Score: 1

    In case I lose my wallet or there is a problem with the bank or whatever, I keep $10-$20 cash in car. That'll get gas to get me home or whatever.

    At home, in the safe, I have enough cash to at least make it to the next pay day.

  9. connection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >but the spokesman was unable to confirm a connection between the two incidents.

    Isn't the network provider, Optus, the thing they have in common? Apparently, there's been reported outages in the Optus network all month long.

  10. Cashless Society == Bad Idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is one the reasons why a cashless society is a bad idea. Suppose the electronic systems were down for a couple of weeks. How is one without cash going to buy food, fuel, essential medicine, and pay for the rent/mortgage? In fact this is one of the less important reasons why its a bad idea. A quick summary of the other reasons why a cashless society is bad:
              - Government and the Corporations get to monitor EVERY transaction made. No privacy. Anything and everything may be used against you now or in the future.
              - WIth the push of a button the Government (and perhaps the Banks too) can turn off your money.
                        - No money for rent/mortgage, food, essential medicine, or fuel.
                        - No money to pay the lawyer to fight it.
              - Bank have absolute control of your money. You don't.
                        - Fees for every kind of transfer, even small ones. No other option. Its not like you can just pull your money out in cash.
                        - Fees for the storage of your money. Your money dwindles away if you don't spend it. They can motivate you to spend more by increasing fees, and/or charing negative interest.
                        - No way to opt out of dealing with the banks. Best option is maybe getting to switch banks.
                        - Banks can dictate how your spend your money -- increasing fees for payments to parties they don't like, or denying them altogether.

    1. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by Peter+P+Peters · · Score: 2

      This is one the reasons why a cashless society is a bad idea. Suppose the electronic systems were down for a couple of weeks.

      What if water or electricity went down for weeks? The simple fact is that as these services become more important, they also become more resilient to failure. These days, outages are generally contained to hours rather than days, and that is an acceptable loss for the benefit they give (ie much greater accountability of transactions).

    2. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      Accountability is not a positive -- it's a negative. Why should we have to account for everything we buy and sell to a corporation or government? Anonymity and privacy == freedom.

    3. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by geekymachoman · · Score: 1

      And this is why cryptocoins are good. Banks would love nothing more than for all y'all go cashless, even if they know something like this may happen.
      They want more for themselves, and more control they have the more they going to exploit you.

      Slashdot folk hate cryptocurrencies. Eg. I'm a freelancer. I regularly get my employers from across the world to buy Ethereum, and then send it to me... and I cash out 15 minutes later when I get it on my side, fees are about 5 dollars. Banks ? Takes 5 days for money to be wire transferred to me with a fee of $50 dollars.

      This is just one example, but the fact that banks see cryptocurrencies as a threat, means that it's a good thing for all of us.

    4. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not ask them to buy XRP then you can keep the fee?

    5. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by fafalone · · Score: 1

      After Sandy, access to cash was a significant problem here. No power, floods. A lot of people with no cars, or unreachable cars, transit down. Stores were open quick, without power and if not flooded. It was days before there were ATMs in town, and those were driven in on special trucks with satellite coms, and I guarantee these trucks werent available to less wealthy areas. IIRC, $200 limit. National outages might be confined to days, but regional issues exist too.

    6. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is one without cash going to buy food, fuel, essential medicine, and pay for the rent/mortgage?

      This is a problem right now. I was at a gas station recently and couldn't get gas. Why? Their computer system was down. I told them I could pay cash, but it didn't matter, they simply couldn't process any payments at all. I ended up having to go to another gas station.

      I don't think I've been able to pay my rent in cash, ever. Certainly not with the landlords I've had in the last 20 years.

    7. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Suppose the electronic systems were down for a couple of weeks. How is one without cash going to buy food

      If electronic systems are down for a couple of weeks then you're not getting food even if you have cash. The back side of a businesses haven't worked with cash for a long time.

      Speaking of, they also don't work on a payment on transfer of goods basis either. There are plenty of alternatives if your payment processor goes down that doesn't involve having to deal with cash.

    8. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      These days, outages are generally contained to hours rather than days, and that is an acceptable loss for the benefit they give (ie much greater accountability of transactions).

      When you have a hostile government that's a bug, not a feature. Except, of course, to those who would control you.

      When the last victimless crime is removed from the books, and the last corrupt cop is put in the ground, I'll support a cashless society.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    9. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by Peter+P+Peters · · Score: 1

      Accountability is not a positive -- it's a negative. Why should we have to account for everything we buy and sell to a corporation or government? Anonymity and privacy == freedom.

      Total Freedom = Jungle. And most of us don't want that. The difference between jungle and non-jungle is accountability.

    10. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      I'd take a jungle over a prison any day of the week. You seem to want a prison, because you're too cowardly to appreciate freedom.

    11. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      And, compared to Australia, the US government is much more hostile. Which is why the US doesn't deserve a cashless society.

      The US imprisons 1% of its population; it's a worldwide disgrace among free countries.

    12. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by Peter+P+Peters · · Score: 1

      I'd take a jungle over a prison any day of the week. You seem to want a prison, because you're too cowardly to appreciate freedom.

      Of course, because there's only two possible options...

    13. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      I'll stay on the side of freedom, so long as the US has cop trash and lawmaker trash seeking to put people in a cage for victimless crimes.

    14. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by Peter+P+Peters · · Score: 1

      I'll stay on the side of freedom, so long as the US has cop trash and lawmaker trash seeking to put people in a cage for victimless crimes.

      It never occurred to you that those cops and lawmakers are just exercising their own freedom? Or do you think they shouldn't be free to continue and be held accountable for their actions?

    15. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by Agripa · · Score: 1

      This is one the reasons why a cashless society is a bad idea. Suppose the electronic systems were down for a couple of weeks.

      What if water or electricity went down for weeks?

      I have a water heater and stored bottled water. I have fuel and emergency generator. If the systems my cashless society relies on fail, then I have a couple weeks worth of cash on hand ... err ... wait, I think I see a problem.

      The simple fact is that as these services become more important, they also become more resilient to failure. These days, outages are generally contained to hours rather than days, and that is an acceptable loss for the benefit they give (ie much greater accountability of transactions).

      Utilities have gotten more reliable? That sure has not happened anywhere I have lived over the past decades. That is why I had to get the backup generator mentioned above.

    16. Re:Cashless Society == Bad Idea by Peter+P+Peters · · Score: 1

      Utilities have gotten more reliable? That sure has not happened anywhere I have lived over the past decades. That is why I had to get the backup generator mentioned above.

      Not sure how old you are or maybe it's where you live, but my parents both didn't have toilets in their houses when they were kids, and their grandparents didn't have electricity. So yeah, utilities are much better than they used to be.
      The graph of progress is not a straight line. Don't confuse the dips with a change of direction.

      I have a water heater and stored bottled water. I have fuel and emergency generator. If the systems my cashless society relies on fail, then I have a couple weeks worth of cash on hand

      Right so you have a primary solution and a backup for emergencies, which is much better than just one system. I don't think that 'the cashless society' means 100% cash-free, like the paperless office, it means mostly electronic, with paper still usable as a backup.

    17. Re: Cashless Society == Bad Idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can still avoid that negative interest. Buy gold, store it in a safe. Also useful for black market purchases.

  11. Re:Gas money car, more in safe at home. Lost walle by gravewax · · Score: 1

    Yep I usually keep a hundred in my wallet and another 50 or so in the car somewhere for when I forget my wallet. I also ALWAYS have cards from 2 separate banks, especially when on holidays to avoid the sort of problem the NAB had, I have NAB cards, but also CBA and WESTPAC in australia so was unaffected (except the checkout at the supermarket took me 30 seconds longer as I had to hunt in my wallet for a second card after the NAB one was declined).

  12. System failure by pdms · · Score: 0

    One step closer to crypto currency acceptance

    1. Re:System failure by Peter+P+Peters · · Score: 1

      One step closer to crypto currency acceptance

      The backup for an electronic system is not another electronic system, it is analog ie paper. And we already have a paper based backup system for currency exchange that works quite well.

    2. Re:System failure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We also have backup in case of cash/paper money becomes valueless such as physical items like gold and barter.

      Trade a shaving kit for a hipster coffee so poor cashless hippy can show his baby face again and go out into the wild.

    3. Re:System failure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not in Venuzuela, I shouldn't have to worry about the mount I pay being worth a massively different amount the day after I transfer it.

  13. Re:Frast Porst by thesupraman · · Score: 0

    Ummmm. What?

    And by what, I mean, what are you smoke, and can the rest of us have some? it must be damn good shit.

  14. Vouchers for EFTPOS did exist in Australia. by robbak · · Score: 1

    EFTPOS install kits, up until a few years ago, included vouchers for EFTPOS. These could be run through the imprinter machine, and then banked manually. Each merchant would have a floor limit for these transactions - which could be zero for debit cards - and if a transaction is more than that, they have to call a phone number where a computer would authorize the transaction. This computer system was probably down with the rest of the system...

    --
    Prediction for end of Universe #42: Fencepost error in Quantum_bogosort.cpp
  15. There's a lesson here-scheduling disasters. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unfortunately the only emergency I'm ready for is the end of the world, and no they don't take American Express.

  16. Re:and when you go to an store that does not take by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, in this case, they probably wouldn't, because the store would be closed, they don't take cash!

  17. Re:Gas money car, more in safe at home. Lost walle by Peter+P+Peters · · Score: 1

    Yep I usually keep a hundred in my wallet and another 50 or so in the car somewhere for when I forget my wallet. I also ALWAYS have cards from 2 separate banks, especially when on holidays to avoid the sort of problem the NAB had, I have NAB cards, but also CBA and WESTPAC in australia so was unaffected (except the checkout at the supermarket took me 30 seconds longer as I had to hunt in my wallet for a second card after the NAB one was declined).

    Yeah it's a bit if a no-brainer for those of us that are used to dealing with HA/DR type scenarios. Multiple card from multiple banks, plus cash, plus more cash elsewhere just in case.
    While the bank can take the lion's share of blame for having flaky systems, the retailers and customers have to take some responsibility for not being prepared for such events.

  18. A literal cashless society by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cashless societies will work as long as the power grid doesn't go down. And the software doesn't crash.

  19. Cityless Society == Good Idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Solar and batteries. Well for the water. You city folks are screwed though, eggs in one basket, kind of like your cashless society.

  20. Re: and when you go to an store that does not take by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why the fuck would I ever go into a store that doesn't take cash?

  21. Re: and when you go to an store that does not take by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

    Because in some countries, a lot of stores are going cashless. You may not have the choice.

  22. Australia is going cashless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cash is rarer and rarer in Australia especially with younger generations. Stand in a coffee shop for 10 mins and it's rare to see anyone hand over notes. The coffee shop in my office lobby gets flustered if you give them cash. Some food shops etc don't handle cash saying EFTPOS only. I can't remember the last time I handed over more than $20 in cash for anything. As others have said in Australia EFTPOS is online only - if the system is down it won't process. In this case all NAB was down so anyone with a NAB card or who used a NAB terminal to take money was screwed. It also affected HICAPS which is used to process Health Care refunds for dentists, GP's, Physios etc.

    One worrying trend here is major infrastructure outages- recently the largest telephone operator TELSTRA has had multiple country or multiple state outages - which suspiciously point to a single failure somewhere. It's quite possible to design systems that don't go down but if you don't spend the money you don't get it.
     

    A couple of years ago a major bank in the UK was taken out completely for over a week because a single mainframe support operator in India managed to completely wreck the system.

    1. Re: Australia is going cashless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget BA went down last year as well.

    2. Re:Australia is going cashless by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      It happened again, about a month ago.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    3. Re:Australia is going cashless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Some food shops etc don't handle cash saying EFTPOS only."
      And yet, the only place that has refused to accept cash recently I've seen is Jetstar in flight purchases.

      "recently the largest telephone operator TELSTRA has had multiple country or multiple state outages - which suspiciously point to a single failure somewhere."
      They had different root causes.

  23. It wasn't that big of a deal by Lurks · · Score: 1

    I use this bank. The first I knew of this, I was in the supermarket buying groceries. When I went to pay, the machine said it needed a signature too. This is weird, I've never seen it before. So, I just did it and I got to walk out with my groceries.

    Earlier I had bought a few more expensive things in a department store. It's entirely possible I wouldn't have been able to buy them then.

    Apparently it was caused by a power outage to the mainframe. Maybe they should move this stuff off mainframes like everyone else has. Shrug.

    1. Re: It wasn't that big of a deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mainframes are reliable systems with great Ha capabilities and killer performance when it comes to transactional workloads.

  24. Re:and when you go to an store that does not take by anonieuweling · · Score: 1

    One does NOT go to a store that does not take cash.

  25. Australia is pretty much cashless by Harlequin80 · · Score: 3, Informative

    And these issues happen very very rarely and, even when they do the impact in minimal.

    9 million people without cash? Bullshit. Technically I am a NAB customer as I have a NAB cc and a NAB savings account. They are literally never used and exist purely as a backup. I cannot remember the last time I used them. We have a population of ~25 million people, and while NAB is a major bank there is no way in hell they are the primary bank for 9 million.

    I also use android pay for 99% of my store transactions and only ever use my card when I exceed the phone pay limit, which seems to be somewhere around $450. I would be lucky to use cash for 1 transaction a fortnight.

    Finally while you may have been unable to do EFTPOS transactions out of your savings accounts credit cards still have offline capabilities. So if you were one of the really really rare people, who only has a savings account and only banks with NAB then maybe you would have had an issue if you tried to do something during the brief outage. Everyone else would have just used the office CC transaction model.

    1. Re:Australia is pretty much cashless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And these issues happen very very rarely and, even when they do the impact in minimal.

      9 million people without cash? Bullshit. Technically I am a NAB customer as I have a NAB cc and a NAB savings account. They are literally never used and exist purely as a backup. I cannot remember the last time I used them. We have a population of ~25 million people, and while NAB is a major bank there is no way in hell they are the primary bank for 9 million.

      I also use android pay for 99% of my store transactions and only ever use my card when I exceed the phone pay limit, which seems to be somewhere around $450. I would be lucky to use cash for 1 transaction a fortnight.

      Finally while you may have been unable to do EFTPOS transactions out of your savings accounts credit cards still have offline capabilities. So if you were one of the really really rare people, who only has a savings account and only banks with NAB then maybe you would have had an issue if you tried to do something during the brief outage. Everyone else would have just used the office CC transaction model.

      well clearly if you use NAB only as a backup then the same must apply to all other 9 million customers.

    2. Re:Australia is pretty much cashless by Harlequin80 · · Score: 1

      How hard do you have to work to twist your comprehension to come to that statement? It must be exhausting.

    3. Re:Australia is pretty much cashless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. This affected me - about an hour of inconvenience on a Saturday morning.
      If you can't deal with this sort of small-fry bullshit, you're not going to cope with this whole, unpredictable 'life' thing.

    4. Re:Australia is pretty much cashless by DogDude · · Score: 1

      I also use android pay for 99% of my store transactions

      So, not only do you give 3% of your money to Visa/MC, but you ALSO give Google all of your purchase information? You're a good little drone, aren't you? VISA/MC/Google love people like you!

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    5. Re: Australia is pretty much cashless by Harlequin80 · · Score: 1

      Given i dont get a discount for cash why should i care about 3% (your merchant pays way too much if they are paying 3%) going to the processing company.

      And re data, what is the nefarious outcome i need to be concerned by? So google knows i go to my local coffee shop and spends $9? Or i have a spend of x per week at the supermarket. Im really not sure why i should care.

      What are they going to do? Advertise to me? I am tax compliant, i dont have a random drug problem im trying to hide, political donations have to be declared anyway. So whats the angle i should be worried about?

    6. Re: Australia is pretty much cashless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hahaha

      So you would agree then that there should be no reason not to tell the state your religion and there was nothing wrong with the SS rounding jews up and murdering them? I mean your line of thinking suggests the SS were just doing there job right? The problem is not what is being done now necessarily- but what or how future governments will use that information. Maybe you will buy a product some day that seems innocuous and some day a future government will round up everybody whose purchased said product. The issue is we don't know the future- but we do know the governments of today routinely abuse the fuck out of the people. They steal from people and brainwash the masses into saying it for our own good. Yea- I pay my taxes too- but that doesn't mean I agree that its not theft or its "for my own good". And the worst thing about it all is its the poorest who suffer from the taxation situation today. They claim the poor don't pay taxes- but that is the farthest thing from the truth. The poor pay taxes via various hidden means. It's most often that taxes just get passed on. In Europe people pay 20%-25% for goods and services and the government hides this fact. In most of the US similar even if to a lesser degree the same thing happens. Then there are rents that pay other people's mortgages and property taxes. While some people may get "free" housing most poor people don't and you force others out onto the street via other regulatory means (ie pushing up housing prices by banning affordable high rise housing etc etc).

    7. Re:Australia is pretty much cashless by Agripa · · Score: 1

      And these issues happen very very rarely and, even when they do the impact in minimal.

      Didn't Nedry or Arnold say that in Jurassic Park?

  26. Expired Certs by felixrising · · Score: 1

    Let me guess... someone let a cert expire?

  27. Re:The solution: Go cashlessa by bn-7bc · · Score: 1

    Well personaly my life is better wit cards only (98%of the time) I disslke hadeling cash because of sub par eyesight so checking chang takes me forever, a chi an pin transaction on the other hands takes less than 30 secondsfrom the time the pos has the total till Ikm done and no damed change. Ofc if the suystem either at mybank or at the posis down it rakes longer but well I’s so infreqent that it is akllmost a nn issue

  28. Re:Frast Porst by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're a blatant shill and a racist. You use the website to promote pro-American, anti-Russian and anti-Chinese propaganda. It's been clearly documented how you and your moderators consistently leave racist comments to stand, even when they are reported multiple times. You may want to consider how this affects your reputation.

    If someone has and uses the capability to break into banking systems, it's the NSA and CIA. You know just as well as everyone that if anything happens, the U.S. are responsible, and will be the first to accuse Russia and put out a "report" and an official-looking statement to blame Russia.

    And what's worst is you're so paranoid and afraid of the outside world that you think this is a good thing.

  29. Re:Gas money car, more in safe at home. Lost walle by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

    While the bank can take the lion's share of blame for having flaky systems, the retailers and customers have to take some responsibility for not being prepared for such events.

    And how often does it happen?

    What backup systems would there be, other than cash? Payment systems meltdown very rarely - maybe once a year at the high end of the range, and usually only for a day tops.

    Having manual cashless methods is not viable for something that infrequent - first off, retail turnover is high, while I know a retail store whose employees worked there for years, most retailers will have 200+% turnover rate, making training for such things pointless because chances are, it won't happen.

    If it's something that happens more often, then yes it makes sense to do it. But it still happens really infrequently and while it sucks, you tend to just tolerate it.

    I mean, I pump gas when the gauge goes around half or so - so if I can't pump gas one day because payment is down, I can pump it tomorrow, or the day after. There's nothing I generally do that requires me to have something bought immediately on that day that it cannot wait a day. And I have sufficient cash on hand to go through a couple of days worth of expenses (lunches and such, but even then I could whip something up from the pantry).

  30. Re: and when you go to an store that does not take by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In this case I think it should be prudent for these stores to realize what happens to their daily sales when the banks go down over techincal issues (it goes to zero) and after considering that, rethink their policy.

    Seriously those stores have probably already at one point or another already had days when their interact or credit card machines screwed up and stopped working.

    If they want to encourage cashless, they should do it by having incentives to for paying by cash, rather than just telling customers GTFO.

  31. Too much reliance on technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always carry some cash for the obvious reason I have experienced times where credit card machines go down, or communication lines are severed leaving authorizations for purchases not available. People freak out the same when their cell phone service goes down. I've seen shops close up because they have no electricity and their registers won't open.

  32. a cheque, are you a caveman? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just scan the QR code on your phone.

  33. hooray by AndyKron · · Score: 1

    But hooray for a cashless society!

  34. Ha! by Frankie70 · · Score: 1

    In India, this was done on purpose in 2016.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    It took more than 3 months before ATMs started working like normal. Lots of people died in lines outside banks.

  35. ROFLMAO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am laughing so hard at the idiots that never listen. How many times do you hear people give warnings about this happening yet the stupid are everywhere. Not the first time nor the last time it will happen, AND it will be the same lame people crying the next time it happens because to them 'learning' is a four letter word. And yes, they do believe it is four letters.

    Why even report on this? Let's all dance and sing and make a game out of it. This article is too complicated to grasp for an idiot like me.

  36. I think you mean UA-video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You keep finding new ways to provoke creimer. Too bad he left Slashdot for UA-video. You can't provoke someone who isn't here.

    26 2014
    C.D. Reimer is reinventing himself on UA-video. Come along for the journey and find out where it takes him. Focusing on comic cons, Silicon Valley, technology and anything else that doesn't fit. New videos every Friday.

  37. Watch CD-reimer on UA-video!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    26 2014
    C.D. Reimer is reinventing himself on UA-video. Come along for the journey and find out where it takes him. Focusing on comic cons, Silicon Valley, technology and anything else that doesn't fit. New videos every Friday.

  38. The systems today really aren’t sufficiently robust to handle the contingencies.

    Sad but true. This is a story about a one day outage. In the UK, the bank TSB has been having similar problems for over one month, due to what appears to have been a spectacular failure while trying to migrate to a new IT system.

    I'm also in the camp that keeps a significant amount of cash in safe, always-accessible places these days, after seeing a few too many incidents where people were literally unable to get money out of bank accounts and the like in recent years. But even I would have run out of savings to live on by that point, I think.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    1. Re:TSB by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      Guess I am paranoid... always two different banks. (If you use a credit union, two different credit unions might not offer incremental improvements, since many are serviced by the same network.)

      When I lived on a tiny island without reliable communications, the owner of a shop I worked at always had two (or three) different merchant accounts and terminals to address the issue. Harder to do with modern POS systems though.

    2. Re:TSB by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      It's not paranoia if they really are all out to get you. :-) I too use different banks and other financial services for just about everything, due in part to past experiences with too many eggs in one basket when something stopped working.

      Bank != credit card != mortgage lender != any service for business != any other service for business.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  39. layer upon layer of complexity by jasonharrop · · Score: 1

    This is what 40+ years of technical debt looks like.

    Another symptom of this underlying issue at NAB: My NAB debit card simply doesn't work in London, in any ATM. It works everywhere else I've travelled in Europe and Asia. (Oh, except for 1 trip to Helsinki)

    NAB has no idea why, and can't offer a solution (no, its not flagged/blocked, yes, its compatible with the ATM, yes, the network seems OK). But then, they have bigger fish to fry...

  40. Er, don't worry, they're on it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bitcoin gundam:
      https://www.cio.com.au/article/628691/nab-join-ibm-blockchain-powered-pacific-payment-network/

    Cloud Gundam:
    https ://www.computerworld.com.au/article/635990/nab-offer-cloud-training-2000-employees/

    Cloud and Bitcoin to the rescue. With the awesome power of these concepts, who needs to run a data centre properly?

  41. Re:Gas money car, more in safe at home. Lost walle by gravewax · · Score: 1

    The issue isn't whether or not you can wait, it is the pure inconvenience. For example at the checkout with a cart full of groceries only to find your bank is currently offline (as happens to 10's of thousands of people for this incident, and also for the CBA incident not that long ago and then again for the ANZ incident). What do you do when you pump the gas only to then find your card is declined? you will be forced to leave a guarantee of some sort as well as the hugely inconvenient process of filling out forms and identification and a further trip back their with either cash or a working card, if you don't have that you are fucked. Once a year is more than enough incentive to have a spare card which costs nothing but a few minutes to apply for and get, even if it only saves you an hour every 5 years you are miles ahead. For me it saved me a good hour for just this incident, saved me many hours and a great deal of pain last time I was in the US only to find one of my cards had been skimmed so the bank had to cancel it while I was getting on a flight to London. So easy to have a safe DR solution so why the fuck not.

  42. Re:Gas money car, more in safe at home. Lost walle by Peter+P+Peters · · Score: 1

    While the bank can take the lion's share of blame for having flaky systems, the retailers and customers have to take some responsibility for not being prepared for such events.

    And how often does it happen?

    What backup systems would there be, other than cash?

    Cash was the backup system I was referring to. The people complaining didn't have any, and they're putting all the blame on other people.

  43. Re:and when you go to an store that does not take by mjwx · · Score: 1

    and when you go to an store that does not take cash>

    Modded funny and rightfully so.

    A store you walk into and does not take cash has to be very specialised indeed. Pretty much the kind of business that doesn't really have stock on hand. In Australia, certain types of stores (supermarkets in particular) are obliged to accept cash, otherwise it's optional but you're going to find more cardless stores than cashless ones.

    The last place I shopped at that was cashless preferred payment by bank transfer (faster payments here in the UK) and gave you a 5% discount for doing so over card payments.

    So only a fool goes cashless. I couldn't manage it here in the UK, how else do I pay for parking, a drink, something to eat and any other small item and there are still a few businesses that do not have card machines.

    --
    Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.