NFC technology is rooted in
radio-frequency identification technology (known as RFID) which allows compatible hardware to both supply power to and communicate with an otherwise unpowered and passive electronic tag using radio waves. This is used for identification, authentication and
tracking. Similar ideas in advertising and industrial applications were not generally successful commercially, outpaced by technologies such as
QR codes,
barcodes and
UHF RFID tags. The first patent to be associated with the abbreviation "
RFID" was granted to
Charles Walton on May 17, 1983. In 1997, an early form was patented and first used in
Star Wars character toys for
Hasbro. The patent was originally held by Andrew White and Marc Borrett at Innovision Research and Technology. The device allowed data communication between two units in close proximity. On March 25, 2002,
Philips and
Sony agreed to establish a technology specification and created a technical outline.
Philips Semiconductors applied for the six fundamental patents of NFC, invented by the Austrian and French engineers Franz Amtmann and Philippe Maugars who received the
European Inventor Award in 2015. NFC was approved as an
ISO/
IEC standard on December 8, 2003, and later as an
ECMA standard. In 2004, Nokia, Philips and Sony established the NFC Forum. That same year, Nokia launched NFC shell add-on for
Nokia 5140 and later
Nokia 3220 models, to be shipped in 2005. The year 2005 saw mobile phone experimentations in transports, with payment in May in
Hanau (Nokia) and validation aboard in October in
Nice with
Orange and payment in shops in October in
Caen (
Samsung) with first reception of "Fly Tag" informations. Initial specifications for NFC Tags were released in 2006, along with specifications for "SmartPoster" records. In 2007, Innovision's NFC tags were used in the first consumer trial in the UK, in the
Nokia 6131 handset.
AirTag launched what it called the first NFC SDK in 2008. In January 2009, the NFC Forum released Peer-to-Peer standards to transfer contacts,
URLs, initiate
Bluetooth, etc. NFC was first used in transports by
China Unicom and Yucheng Transportation Card in the tramways and bus of
Chongqing on January 19, 2009, then implemented for the first time in a metro network, by China Unicom in
Beijing on December 31, 2010. In 2010, Innovision released a suite of designs and patents for low cost, mass-market mobile phones and other devices. The
Nokia C7, the first NFC-capable smartphone, was released in 2010, with the NFC feature enabled by software update in early 2011. The
Samsung Nexus S, the first
Android NFC phone, was shown in 2010. On May 21, 2010,
Nice, France, launched, with "Cityzi", the "Nice City of contactless mobile" project, the first in Europe to provide inhabitants with NFC bank cards and mobile phones (like Samsung Player One S5230), and a "bouquet of services" covering transportation (tramways and bus), tourism and student's services. Google I/O "How to NFC" demonstrated NFC to initiate a game and to share a contact, URL, app or video in 2011. NFC support became part of the
Symbian mobile operating system with the release of Symbian Anna version in 2011. In 2012, UK restaurant chain
EAT. and Everything Everywhere (
Orange Mobile Network Operator), partnered on the UK's first nationwide NFC-enabled smartposter campaign. A dedicated mobile phone app is triggered when the NFC-enabled mobile phone comes into contact with the smartposter. Sony introduced NFC "Smart Tags" to change modes and profiles on a Sony smartphone at close range in 2012, included with the
Sony Xperia P Smartphone released the same year. Samsung and
VISA announced their partnership to develop mobile payments in 2013. In 2013,
IBM scientists, in an effort to curb fraud and security breaches, developed an NFC-based mobile authentication security technology. This technology works on similar principles to
dual-factor authentication security. In October 2014, Dinube became the first non-card payment network to introduce NFC contactless payments natively on a mobile device, i.e. no need for an external case attached or NFC 'sticker' nor for a card. Based on
Host card emulation with its own
application identifier (AID), contactless payment was available on
Android KitKat upwards and commercial release commenced in June 2015. In 2014,
AT&T,
Verizon and
T-Mobile released
Softcard (formerly ISIS mobile wallet). It runs on NFC-enabled Android phones and
iPhone 4 and
iPhone 5 when an external NFC case is attached. The technology was purchased by
Google and the service ended on March 31, 2015. In September 2015, Google's
Android Pay function was launched, a direct rival to Apple Pay, and its roll-out across the US commenced. In November 2015,
Swatch and Visa Inc. announced a partnership to enable NFC financial transactions using the "Swatch Bellamy" wristwatch. The system is currently online in Asia, through a partnership with
China UnionPay and Bank of Communications. The partnership will bring the technology to the US, Brazil, and Switzerland.
Ultra-wideband (UWB) another radio technology has been hailed as a future possible alternatives to NFC technology due to further distances of data transmission, as well as Bluetooth and wireless technology. == Design ==