IS 14202 : Part 12 : 2014/ISO/IEC 7816-12 : 2005 : Identification Cards - Integrated Circuit Cards Part 12 Cards with Contacts - USB Electrical Interface and Operating Procedures
Reaffirmed 2022
NATIONAL FOREWORD
This Indian Standard (Part 12) which is identical with ISO/IEC 7816-12 : 2005 ‘Identification cards - Integrated circuit cards - Part 12: Cards with contacts - USB electrical interface and operating procedures’ issued by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) jointly was adopted by the Bureau of Indian Standards on the recommendations of the Computer Hardware, Peripherals and Identification Cards Sectional Committee and approval of the Electronics and Information Technology Division Council.
This standard is one of the parts of series of standards on ‘Identification cards - Integrated circuit cards’. The other parts in this series are:
Part 1 Cards with contacts - Physical characteristics
Part 2 Cards with contacts - Dimensions and location of the contacts
Part 3 Electrical interface and transmission protocols
Part 4 Organization security and commands for interchange
Part 5 Registration of application providers
Part 6 Interindustry data elements for interchange
Part 7 Interindustry commands for structured card query language (SCQL)
Part 8 Commands for security operations
Part 9 Commands for management
Part 10 Electronic signals and answer to reset for synchronous cards
Part 11 Personal verification through biometric methods
Part 13 Commands for application management in multi-application environment
The text of ISO/IEC Standard has been approved as suitable for publication as an Indian Standard without deviations. Certain conventions are, however, not identical to those used in Indian Standards. Attention is particularly drawn to the following:
a) Wherever the words ‘International Standard’ appear referring to this standard, they should be read as ‘Indian Standard’.
b) Comma (,) has been used as a decimal marker while in Indian Standards, the current practice is to use a point (.) as the decimal marker.