WASHINGTON — You don’t hear as much about cellphone theft as you used to, but that doesn’t mean the problem has gone away.
Quite the opposite, says Herb Weisbaum of NBC²ÝÝ®´«Ã½.com. According to a Consumer Reports survey, about 3.1 million cellphones were stolen in 2013, Weisbaum told ²ÝÝ®´«Ã½’s Dimitri Sotis and Veronica Robinson.
The number of thefts is more than twice the number stolen in 2012.
“And some of these crimes are very violent,” Weisbaum says.
Many law-enforcement officials across the country are trying to get kill-switch technology into cellphones, making them worthless to thieves. So far, many of the carriers and equipment manufacturers have signed onto a voluntary kill-switch plan for new phones sold after July 1 of next year — similar to the activiation lock on iOS7.
Lawmakers aren’t satisfied. The agreement provides for opt-in kill switches, which require the user to turn on or download the technology; they want the technology to be installed and activated automatically, Weisbaum says, so that would-be thieves already know that stealing a phone would be pointless.
As it stands, there’s a huge market for stolen phones.
“You can make more money, as a crook, selling a smartphone than you could make selling a laptop,” Weisbaum says. “These things are in big demand overseas.”
The cellphone companies tout their “blacklists,” which allow you to report a stolen phone and have it turned off — but Weisbaum says they only apply to the U.S.
“So all the bad guys are doing … they ship the phones overseas, and the phone is turned back on again.”
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