tuscl

OT: Be careful with your smartphone in public

Papi_Chulo
Miami, FL (or the nearest big-booty club)
Push is on to get ‘kill switch' into smartphones

Everyone wants a smartphone, especially muggers.

Smartphone thefts now account for 30 to 40 percent of all robberies nationwide, according to the Secure Our Smartphones (S.O.S.) Initiative, a coalition of police, prosecutors, lawmakers and consumer advocates. The group claims about 1.6 million people were attacked for their phones in 2012.
Law enforcement believes technology exists—the so-called kill switch—to stop this epidemic of crime by removing the economic incentive for stealing these expensive phones.

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If activated, the kill switch would permanently lock the phone, making it inoperable on any network anywhere in the world.

Phone manufacturers and wireless carriers at odds

Apple now has the "Activation Lock" feature on its new iOS 7 operating system. And Samsung has developed kill switch technology for Android phones. But so far, the option has not been deployed and critics blame the nation's wireless carriers for blocking it.

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, co-chair of the S.O.S. Initiative, called it "disturbing" that the nation's leading smartphone carriers knowingly dismissed technology that could save lives. He's suggested they might not want a kill switch because they receive so much money from companies that sell phone insurance.

"My office will determine whether these companies allowed their business relationships to influence their ability to take immediate action against theft," Schneiderman said in a news release.

Last June, S.O.S. called on wireless carriers and phone manufacturers to "put public safety before corporate profits" by implementing this kill switch technology on all new phones within a year.

Mark Leno, a California state senator from San Francisco, refuses to wait any longer. The Democrat plans to introduce a bill in the next few weeks that would require a kill switch in all new smartphones sold in California.

"It is time to act on this serious public safety threat to our communities," Leno said. "Criminals know there is a very valuable device on most people walking down the street. To address these crimes, we have to take some bold action and that's what this bill would do."

(Read more: Who has happiest mobile users? Hint: Think small)

Leno wants the kill switch to be something that's already part of every new phone, not something you have to download, even if it's free. For this to be a deterrent, he said, criminals must know every new phone has a kill switch.

San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon, a founding member of the S.O.S. Initiative, supports the Leno bill. He believes this could prompt the industry to come up with a solution before it is forced to do something.

"If the industry doesn't move ahead, the manufacturers and carriers who are refusing to work on this technological solution, then we will have a legislative process they will have to deal with," Gascon said.

What have the wireless carriers done?

CTIA speaks for the wireless industry. Michael Altschul, CTIA's senior vice president and general counsel, said its member companies have moved "as quickly as possible" to solve the theft problem.

In a statement to CNBC, Altschul said they are working to develop a "proactive, multifaceted approach of databases, technology, consumer education and legislation and international partnerships to remove the aftermarket for stolen phones."

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For example, there are now databases that blacklist stolen smartphones so they cannot be reactivated again in the U.S. CTIA also supports a bill in Congress from Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., that would impose tough penalties on those who steal or illegally modify mobile devices.

Here's what the big four wireless companies have to say:

T-Mobile is exploring tools and technologies to end the risk of device theft, including a kill switch option.
Sprint said "numerous concerns and technical details" need to be reviewed before a kill switch could be preloaded on to devices. One of those concerns is that a kill switch could be "exploited by hackers or terrorists."

AT&T did not respond directly, referring us to the industry association.

Verizon seems to be the most amenable to this technology. The company told us it "supports" a free kill switch application for Android devices.

"Once a manufacturer provides us an Android 'kill switch' that is free to consumers we will work to provide it to our customers," wrote Verizon spokesman Scott Charleston.

Tyler Shields, an expert on mobile security at Forrester Research, said phone carriers are attempting to balance security against customer convenience.

"The wireless carriers are trying to defend their ability to have the ultimate best customer experience without having to generally put in too much security," Shields said.

After all, we buy these cool phones for the bells and whistles, not security.

Where do we go from here?

Things seem to be progressing, even if that's a bit slower than some would like. But there are many important issues that still need to be decided:

Can the solution be software-based?

Tom Kemp, CEO of Centrify, a software and cloud security provider, believes most software-based kill switches have limitations because criminals can find a way around them.

"If you really want the full solution, it needs to be some sort of hardware chip that completely bricks the phone and some genius needs to figure out the right way to do that," Kemp said.

Should the kill switch permanently destroy the phone?

Someone who loses a phone and uses the kill switch would need to buy a new one. On the other hand, if that phone is not permanently bricked, it could be shipped overseas and activated there—making the crime profitable.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/101324943


8 comments

  • SlickSpic
    11 years ago
    I still rock the Zack Morris brick phone. Nobody wants to steal that. Not even hipsters.
  • sofaking87
    11 years ago
    People are really tuned out when they are chatting or texting. Those robberies occur because they are so easy to do.
  • mjx01
    11 years ago
    And what's to stop some hacker from randomly killing your phone and then you still have to go get a new one even though it wasn't stolen?

    Come on, we as a nation are incapable of keeping hackers out of our credit card transactions... we certainly aren't capable of preventing people with bad intentions from abusing a cell phone "kill switch"

    IMO amendment 2 is a better solution for muggers and the like.
    (oops... flame war begins!)
  • Papi_Chulo
    11 years ago
    "... People are really tuned out when they are chatting or texting ..."


    So true – some folks don’t even see where they are walking and will even run into you (which is not all bad if it’s a hot chick :))
  • Alucard
    11 years ago
    Keep in in your hands, don't leave it sitting around. When not using it, keep it out of sight. Don't be using 100% of the time you are in public.
  • Papi_Chulo
    11 years ago

    “… Keep in in your hands …”


    Per the article:

    “… about 1.6 million people were attacked for their phones in 2012 ...”


    I’ve seen reports of people just having them snatched from their hands or even assaulted and beat up to get the phone.
  • sharkhunter
    11 years ago
    I believe I found two or three smart phones others just left in the club over the last 2 years. Some people forget to check they still have their phone. I see people coming back looking all the time. They got lucky I found their phone.
  • Alucard
    11 years ago
    As I said - When not using it, keep it out of sight. Don't be using 100% of the time you are in public.

    If you are just sitting around or standing around with the phone in your hands casually, yes, I can see it being targeted.

    If you are going to keep it plastered to your ear all the time in public, don't be surprised if something happens one day.
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