SAN FRANCISCO - In a push to curb cellphone thefts, prosecutors for New
York state and the city of San Francisco said on Wednesday (Thursday,
PHL time) they plan to meet with industry representatives to urge them
to install switches to disable stolen smartphones.
New York State
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and San Francisco District Attorney
George Gascon said they will meet on June 13 with representatives of the
four largest smartphone manufacturers.
They said they will ask
the industry to place "kill switches" on mobile devices to render them
inoperable when stolen, eliminating any incentive for theft.
"With
1.6 million Americans falling victim to smartphone theft in 2012, this
has become a national epidemic," Gascon said in a statement. "Unlike
other types of crimes, smartphone theft can be eradicated with a simple
technological solution."
Gascon and Schneiderman said
representatives of Apple Inc , Google Inc's smartphone maker Motorola
Mobility, Samsung Electronics and Microsoft Corp will attend the summit
in New York.
Last month, two men in San Francisco severely cut a
27-year-old tourist's face and throat while robbing his iPhone. In April
2012, a 26-year-old chef was killed while being robbed of his iPhone on
his way home to the Bronx.
"The theft of handheld devices is the
fastest-growing street crime, and increasingly, incidents are turning
violent," Schneiderman said. "It's time for manufacturers to be as
innovative in solving this problem as they have been in designing
devices that have reshaped how we live."
Representatives for
Samsung, Apple, Microsoft, Google and a cellphone trade group either
declined to comment or were not immediately available for comment.
Gascon
and Schneiderman have both criticized the cellphone industry for what
they perceive as its perceived unwillingness to solve the escalating
problem.
About 50 percent of San Francisco robberies involved
stolen mobile devices last year, Gascon said. A recent study found that
lost and stolen cellphones cost consumers $30 billion in 2012, his
office said.
Some companies have measures in place to reunite
smartphones with their rightful owners. For instance, Apple has the
application Find My iPhone which allows a user to track a missing device
on a map and remotely lock it or erase data.
A nationwide
database has been created for stolen cellphones, but law enforcement
officials say its use is limited because many stolen devices are shipped
overseas or modified so they cannot be easily identified as stolen,
according to a New York Times report from May. - Reuters
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment