> In Amsterdam a lot of the officials that collected the coins actually took a lot for themselves even.
Considering the fact that the machine counts the coins it receives, and a value of coins gets deposited in a bank, this seems like the easiest fraud in the world to catch.
If that went on for a long time, that is some horrifically incompetent oversight.
Edit: I'm suddenly realizing this was probably about the pre-digital coin-operated parking meters. Which makes me wonder how could you prevent widespread skimming? Unless they had tamper-proof "odometers" inside that you had to record the value of each time you emptied them?
> Cash wouldn't work as most charging stations would be constantly broken due to attempts to rob them. It's why even parking meters no longer take cash.
Most gas stations in the US take cash without having to fend off constant robbery attempts. I don't see why EV charging stations could not do the same.
In Amsterdam a lot of the officials that collected the coins actually took a lot for themselves even. All those little coins add up to a lot.
But it should NOT be necessary to give up your privacy. Privacy is a human right.