OK, thanks to @bohwaz for clearing up the SNCF luggage rules

See pages 35 and 178 of SNCF's terms of carriage - PDF https://www.sncf-voyageurs.com/medias-publics/2024-07/tarifs-voyageurs-version-5-juillet-2024-VDEF-FR.pdf

Your luggage needs to VISIBLY indicate your name, and NOTHING ELSE

Note: despite SNCF's own luggage labels having a field for telephone number, this is NOT OBLIGATORY

Also the name being visible would be - for example - covered by you writing the name directly on the bag. It does not have to be a separate label

1/2

Also via @bohwaz "Ces dispositions ne s'appliquent pas aux effets ou menus objets que le voyageur conserve à sa disposition immédiate." - the name requirement does not apply to bags you have right with you

But it DOES apply to each of the bags covered by the luggage rules (1 small, 2 large bags) and - for example - were you to leave a handbag on a seat and go to the toilet, SNCF staff could still get arsey

A mess

Want to be sure? Luggage tag ONLY WITH YOUR NAME ON IT, and ON ALL YOUR BAGS

Agh

There is also a QR code system you can use... https://etiquettebagage.sncf.com

That supposedly guarantees your anonymity

But given it's a LAW that states that your name and first name have to be shown, AND there are operators other than SNCF in France... Hmmm. What the hell to make of this?

Mon étiquette bagage

@jon I got given a couple of QR tags at Gare Montparnasse on the way down to Spain via Hendaye. It seems clear that once you have registered the tag (which seems to require a phone number) then one's name doesn't need to be legible on the tag itself.
@jon This was on 24 July and I think I was given them by Olympic helpers, not SNCF staff.
@jon The main problem is that they're springy plastic and fly off at the merest touch. I eventually mashed one tag into the latch of the suitcase in the rack to make it stay put.
@prl Ah. I presume because the non-QR ones are paper, and tear off in no time. So they solved one problem and caused another! 🙂
@prl Yes that is clear - on SNCF, on those lines where the QR tags work. But that is not all lines, and only on SNCF. Plus as @bohwaz has been documenting the data protection policy is quite poor there too, so I am not convinced by the QR solution.

@jon @bohwaz I'm guessing that no "gadget" is required by SNCF, police etc, the link just leaks enough info that they can check initials and a few mobile number digits against the person standing in front if them they feel they need to.

I assumed that security would be crap, but at least I didn't have to write my name on the tag for everyone to read...

@prl @bohwaz no I think if you scan it with a regular phone you get nothing.