UK Firm To Release 'Screaming' Cell Phone 230
rubberbando writes "Yahoo news is running a story about a plan by a UK cell phone company to help reduce cell theft. Apparently, this new cell phone can be sent a signal after its owner has realized that it has been lost or stolen. The signal tells the phone to wipe all of its data and begin emitting a very loud and obnoxious sound. The sound will only stop if the battery runs out or is removed, but it will begin again as soon as the battery is replaced or charged. Even replacing the sim card will not help."
Brilliant application of 'planned obsolecence' (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Brilliant application of 'planned obsolecence' (Score:4, Insightful)
Or, even worse, if he found out how to send the signal to the phones sans password - after all, if the company is lazy, then maybe all they'd do is dial up the cell phone and send a general purpose "kill" signal. Figure out how to tell the cellphone that it's stolen while still in the possession of its owner, and you can make somebody very, very mad.
Re:Brilliant application of 'planned obsolecence' (Score:4, Insightful)
However, I had an app a while back that could 'build' Operator SMS messages and send them out to peoples phones, so yeah, unless the Operator takes serious steps to secure this system, it's gonna be hacked in no time. Once hacked, the concept will be useless, and the manufacturers will stop including the kill-system in the firmware...
-Jar.
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Which it does...
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pfft.
-Jar.
This phone (Score:2)
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Try and think about the damage a script kiddie could do if he got ahold of a list of people's passwords and phone numbers.
I doubt they'll need script kiddies to screw this up for them.
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Extremely unlikely. A charge of murder requires proof of intent. The prosecution would need to prove that the kid did the disabling with the intent of preventing the user from calling 911, that he had foreknowledge that calling 911 would be necessary to preserve the victim's life, and that the victim had no other reasonable means for calling for help. That's a pretty steep curve.
Criminal negligence, on the other hand, would be relatively easier to prove.
Vir
Such old news the battery is dead by now (Score:2, Redundant)
News is supposed to be new.
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loud and obnoxious (Score:5, Funny)
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So basically... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:So basically... (Score:5, Informative)
If you have the tools to rewrite the NOR flash, then you can indeed turn off the alarm with software. The software will be external to the phone and will have to use some hardware connection to it, though.
Phones already have a GUID !! (Score:2, Interesting)
Cell phones (GSM at least) Already have a GUID which is transmitted all the time while the phone is switched on.
It is easy for operators to track the position of a stolen cellphone down to about a meter if they wanted to.
They have used this to track down the polish kid who knifed someone to death over an iPod.
If you have a cellphone and it's switched on, it's transmitting a guid and position continuously, always.
This is why I think the spat in the UK about ID cards is silly, most people in the UK own a c
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> Also, a pay as you go SIM card normally isn't linked to an identity.
It is very much linked to an identity when the phone spends 6-8 hours per day in the same house and spends workdays at same place of business.
If you carry a cellphone for any length of time, your identity and position at any time are easy to deduce by anyone with access to operator logs.
If you carry it anywhere near security cameras, the position, time and date result in a picture!
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Yes, but... (Score:2)
Obnoxious? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Another deep thought... (Score:4, Funny)
i can only wait (Score:5, Funny)
Isn't this what happens if Paris Hilton calls you?
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You're wrong, it doesnt happen to your cellphone, it happens to your brain when she calls.
As Hammurabi said, a blown-up face for a phone. (Score:5, Funny)
As well as the ear and most of the face of the thief? Seems a little harsh.
Re:As Hammurabi said, a blown-up face for a phone. (Score:5, Funny)
Actually it reminded me of something I was talking about just yesterday, a funny scene from the BBC series from the 1980s, 'The New Statesman'. The main star (Rik Mayall) is held up at knifepoint, and quickly hands over his wallet when it's demanded. The theif runs off, at which point the star smiles, pulls out a little remote from his breast pocket, flips a switch and presses the red button. You hear an explosion and a scream in the distance. Great stuff!
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Who cares if the phone becomes unusable (Score:5, Interesting)
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IMEI, Re:Who cares if the phone becomes unusable (Score:5, Informative)
First and foremost, you must write down your IMEI number [wikipedia.org]. Simply type *#06# into your cell phone. It may look like: AA-BBBBBB-CCCCCC-D . That is the serial number of the phone, and it will not change if the SIM is changed. Write it down into a safe place.
When your phone is stolen, report that number to the police. They will report it to the providers, that will lock down the cell phone [gsmworld.com] for good; moreover, if the phone is ever turned on, they may be able to track the thief whereabouts, using standard cell tecnology; that, and an identikit, may actually help them arrest the thief.
A friend of mine, (who is in IT business) did all of the above, and she really had the thief arrested and prosecuted.
awesome! (Score:5, Funny)
Excellent! I am writing the number down right now in the memo pad application on my cell phone!
Re:IMEI, Re:Who cares if the phone becomes unusabl (Score:2)
The police will NOT track down stolen IMEIs. This is the problem. Even if it would be quite easy: look who the SIM owner is, look who is he calling, go there and put him in jail.
What happens now? The IMEI (hopefully) is put in the blacklist, the thief changes the IMEI (yes, it is feasible on most phones), the phone works again.
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My brother is a DA (Score:2)
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You're expected to let the police take 6+ weeks to recover a stolen item.
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Stolen phones == customer fraud (Score:2, Interesting)
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Simpler (Score:2)
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Well, they used the IMEI [wikipedia.org] number of the phone that is tied to the hardware, although someone with the rights skills might be able to change the flash memory where it's stored. (By the way, you can see the number by typing *#06#). It requires cooperation of the mobile phone providers though, that should have a blacklist of stolen IMEI numbers and take appropriate action as soon as a sto
It makes me think of... (Score:3, Funny)
How long till... (Score:4, Interesting)
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Of course that would be just as illegal as sending out hitmen in the abovementioned cases.
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1. A mobile phone can be used to call 112, and international FREE emergency number (you don't need a SIM to call it). There will be several person that will sue the phone companies if they kill your phone while you need it.
2. If your phone starts screaming in your car, that can lead to a crash
In your case if you had been victim of a car crash (or sinking in water) and were unable to extract the car, the security company would have been sued into oblivion.
Intimidation,
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Lets see..
Late paying: Service turned off... that sends a better message to the user alredy.
Want to switch: If you switch inside your contract.. they already sock you with fees. And if you are switching providers.. you are probably also switching phones so that nulls that issue.
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Ohhhh, goodie! (Score:2)
I call that a win-win.
New terrorist weapon... (Score:2)
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They want their paranoia back.
Who do the police arrest? (Score:5, Funny)
Question: who gets taken to court? The phone manufacturer, for creating a noise nuisance? Or the thief, for stealing the phone? Or me, for damaging someone else's property?
I know the answer: it will be me, won't it?
Re:Who do the police arrest? (Score:5, Funny)
Who called the police? (Score:2)
Although these days, if the police saw you with a brick and a screaming cell phone, you probably needn't worry about going to court; they would probably just consider you to be a terrorist with a bomb. http://news.bbc.co. [bbc.co.uk]
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but will get axed by friendly fire !! (Score:2, Insightful)
But I can just imagine them feeling all gooey inside about the good deed they are about to do
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If you really want your phone back... (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:2)
Too late! (Score:4, Funny)
can you imagine the mischief? (Score:2)
so can you imagine the mischief if that provider's system is gamed/ hacked? and the mischief makers initiate a "call all cell phones" iteration?
depending upon the percentage of cell phones that have this feature, you could cause mass havoc across the entire country
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I am sure that could happen now.
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The obvious next step (Score:2, Funny)
And it will be codenamed... (Score:2)
(Oh, admit it - you knew the punchline before you read it)
How is that different from your average Londoner? (Score:2)
I hope not on a laptop (Score:2)
Sounds like, (Score:2)
a time to trot out my connections, and link to my friend's startup [tencube.com] that provides a similar solution.
Here's the clincher, though: they even have a beta.
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Fortunately, cell phones are perfect... (Score:2)
Heck, why stop at an irritating noise? Have it trip a little relay that will short out the battery and make it explode. That will show them!
"'Mobile' is where the money is"... (Score:2, Insightful)
Note that these guys charge £100 / year ($220). Given that the average mobile would cost £200 to replace (tops, brand new) and you get a free one every year or two with a contract - they are suggesting you pay an insurance premium of c. 50% of the phone value, for a phon
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Also it's not important that it backs up the data... that's a bonus... it's important that it wipes the data on the phone immediately after backing it up.
Think "This message will self-destruct in 10..." but instead of blowing up the phone (which could lead to a lawsuit) it wipes the data and makes the phone really annoying to be around.
IMHO they
Good feature (Score:3, Insightful)
Am I the only person that finds this new 'trend' amongst teenagers on trains antisocial and inconsiderate?
Get those teens back. (Score:2)
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Further Reports... (Score:2)
Listen to sample. [ytmnd.com]
A better name would be ... (Score:2)
Anybody got the link? (Score:2)
Am I missing something? (Score:2)
Honestly, my phone is not that valuable to me. I don't keep any data on it that I don't back up... and while it would suck to lose my phone (because of the cost of replacement), I'm more c
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What if it wasn't stolen, just lost. (Score:2)
Ironic that (Score:2)
A real British comedy would be someone getting their phone stolen and then stealing someone else's phone to call in their report which would lead to that person stealing a phone to call in the theft of their phone and so on... and they all get hauled in to the station and have to explain what happened.... all bloody yelling at each other and the cops about what a degenerate society they live in... roll credits
friends, family? (Score:2)
Just wait for the court cases when friends or family are injured by these booby-trapped phones. They borrowed/found the phone, and someone forgot to tell/remind/remember that the loan/find took place, or the borrower/finder tries to call the owner's other line to return it.
Most 'stolen' phones are lost (Score:2)
Now imagine if every good samaritan had to put up with the damn thing screaming, and everyone staring at them thinking "thief"... You can forget getting your phone back now! The logical course on finding a misplaced phone will be to smash the thing to smithereens now, so it can't start screaming at three AM and wake up every
Have it go off in an overhead compartment (Score:2)
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You miss the point. People are robbed, sometimes violently, for their phones everyday. If all phones had a system like this, there would be no point in robbing people of them.
Police around the world are concerned about the value of the goods we are carrying. For the past ten years or so it's just really been cash, credit cards and mobiles that folk carried. Cas
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Changing the IMEI is illegal in the UK, they past legislation a year or so on this. However, changing it is trivial. I'd imagine that most of the small independent mobile shops (ones that sell pre-paid phones and accessories) would do i
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