Apple Now Working With the NYPD To Curb iPhone Thefts 123
An anonymous reader writes "Back in late 2012, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg attributed the increase in statistical city-wide crime to Apple, noting that thieves had a propensity to target folks using iPhones and iPads. As an illustration of the problem, there were 3,890 more Apple product thefts than in 2012 than there were in 2011. At the time, Mayor Bloomberg's press secretary Marc La Vorgna explained that 'if you just took away the jump in Apple', crime in New York City would have been down year over year. Indeed, the number of major crimes reported in 2011 in NYC came in at 104,948 compared to 108.432 in 2012. If you exclude Apple related thefts from the figures, then the crime rate in 2012 is essentially the same as it was in 2011. In light of that, a new report from the New York Post details that Apple is now working with the NYPD in an effort to curb iPhone and other Apple related thefts."
How about bricking them? (Score:4, Insightful)
Why not simply brick any device reported stolen? I understand it's done in other countries (or for other devices).
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This doesn't really make sense. If Bill is so poor he's resorting to stealing an iPhone (or buying a stolen iPhone, more likely), then his legal phone is going to be some dirt-cheap POS, not a smartphone at all. When he supports the stolen iPhone industry, he's helping sell brand-new iPhones (to replace the stolen ones), which cost hundreds of dollars each. This means lots of profit for Apple.
Re:How about bricking them? (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually your slant is misdirected. It's the cell providers who would brick a phone, and they can do so easily but have resisted calls to do so until recent pressure from certain congressmen and law enforcement brought the issue to a boiling point. It has nothing to do with 'Apple', other than the fact that those phones havea high market value, but rather there was nothing preventing a criminal from activating a known stolen phone on a providers network.
The simple fact is, that cell providers will happily continue to allow criminals to use your stolen phone, even knowing that it's stolen, because it's a source of revenue.
http://blog.chron.com/techblog/2012/11/finally-wireless-carriers-collaborating-on-stolen-cellphone-database/ [chron.com]
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The last 3 months? I remember we were calling for this 10 years ago.
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Re:How about bricking them? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why brick them? Just making using them useless. Every connection to network: WiFi or Cell, just opens a FaceTime connection, so the police can direct comunate with the current holder. So clean records.
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You're right. Cops in my neighborhood are busy finding dark parking lots and deep corners of parking garages to hide out in.
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In NY, no, they don't:
http://gizmodo.com/5986233/apple-theft-is-so-bad-that-the-nypd-has-a-dedicated-itheft-division [gizmodo.com]
Apple theft is so bad the NYPD has an iTheft division.
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Someone files a false police report and someone's phone is bricked
Who's fault is it? I've known people who filed false rape reports and nothing happened
Re:How about bricking them? (Score:5, Informative)
Then the police department and the wireless service provider are both at fault for not verifying your identity and your ownership of the phone.
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Correct. Why is this such a difficult concept in the US? I use an unlocked iPhone in Australia. If it is stolen I promptly contact my telco, identify myself and they permanently deny that phone access to any network in my country. I buy a newer model phone and the dick who took my phone has a paperweight. I claim the loss on my home insurance and pay the insurance excess of a few hundred dollars and no market is created for stolen iPhones.
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Because companies that make cell phones spend more on lobbying than the people who own cell phones.
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You think changing the IMEI / identifiers on any stole phone is hard?
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s/paperweight/glorified iPod touch/
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Regulation is not hard in the USA. The problem is that you want regulation which benefits regular citizens, rather than "regulation" which benefits huge corporations who pay generous "campaign contributions". The USA isn't very good at the former, but it's great at the latter.
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the problem is remote bricking is software based. software can be defeated via jailbreak/rooting
even something like this has limited effect because phones are still usable (just not for voice communication)
http://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/us-stolen-phone-database-goes-live/ [digitaltrends.com]
besides, it takes time for the buyer to figure out the phone won't work as a phone, but the thief still got their money (therefore will keep stealing)
tracking and going after the perp is the best way to curb thefts. If I was a thief, a
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Here in Australia at least I believe a phone can be blocked from accessing a network via its IMEI. You can't change and IMEI through jailbreaking.
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Why not simply brick any device reported stolen? I understand it's done in other countries (or for other devices).
Why not use Lowjack? Find the bastards, what they're doing besides stealing iPhones, iPads or any other electronic device, and take them down. Is it really a stigma if you steal something, you should be punished?
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And this is relevant how ?
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Sadly I have yet to see a decent looking android phone around the lunch table at work.
I don't understand why no one makes an android phone that doesn't look like crap after a week in someone's front pocket.
A superior OS, UI, hardware and casing should be a winner.
PR is the death of rationality (Score:5, Funny)
Re:PR is the death of rationality (Score:5, Insightful)
Chuckle.
I thought the same thing when I read the summary. In one breath they are talking about Major crimes, and in the next sentence they lump in iphone theft in that group. Yet if you report an iPhone theft the police won't do a damn thing about it other than give you some paper to fill out. How is that considered a Major Crime?
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Its a high value theft. I assume they have some threshold for value of stolen goods that makes it major or minor.
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Same probably applies to a $3000 motorcycle (and honestly, to many cars costing far more). Those crimes are pretty hard to investigate and they probably figure that if you cared that much, you would have insurance.
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Yeah, it seems the Sheriff of New York City amounts to a revenue collection role only. (Which is exactly what Sheriffs in Ye Olde England were, the Kings revenue officers first and foremost).
County government in New York City is largely a puppet of the city.
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there were 3,890 more Apple product thefts in 2012 than there were in 2011
Wait... and there were 20 thousand more Apple product thefts in 2012 than there were in 1990 !
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La Vorgna will now be accused (perhaps correctly, and we could run some stats about that) of blaming Apple for NYC crime. The other headline-that-writes-itself is iPhone Thefts /Finally/ Affect Apple Profits Negatively (The Empire* Strikes Back).
These are better than car analogies.
* State
Nothing will work (Score:3, Insightful)
Apple's consumers tend to want to show off the fact that they are Apple consumers. Even their phone & tablet covers have a hole to show off the logo.
My mother taught me not to flash around my valuables, but I doubt you can convince most folks to do this.
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Considering I don't see many Samsung cases with holes in them to show off the logo, no I don't.
Yes! Blame the victims! (Score:1)
Apple's consumers tend to want to show off the fact that they are Apple consumers. Even their phone & tablet covers have a hole to show off the logo.
Yeah, and BMW owners like to show off because they don't cover the logos either.
I fail to see how the presence or absence of a hole showing the logo provides evidence in support of your claim. My case has no hole and yet you can still tell by a casual glance that I have an iphone.
I don't care who sees my phone. The iphone isn't a status symbol. Was it ever? Maybe very, very briefly among a tiny crowd (who pretty much all had iphones.) I can't imagine wanting anything to do with someone who thought "Oooh, he
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I've seen a picture of 3-4 people all with i Phones, "showing each other their gear" (yes, they're showing each other the same fucking phone).
I've had someone show me their phone just to show me that PicSay wasn't in their app store. It's like I thought they were lying? Why would I need or even want to see "no app found"?
Why do I pass by mall stores with a ton of people in there -- and they're not even buying anything! If they're not in there for "cool factor", I'm not sure why they're in there.
Why do I
Hard to fight the trolls (Score:2)
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Pure genius....;-) (Score:2, Funny)
I know, they can use square corners for a disguise!
Pass the blame (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a ridiculous supposition. Are we suppose to believe that the criminals responsible for these thefts were lured into stealing by the flashy Apple gizmos? Or that these criminals would reject crime and find honest work if only New York could rid itself of Apple products?
This is just another example of politicians passing the blame to something else. In this case it's Apple, as blaming Apple for life's ills is in vogue at the moment.
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The claim (verified by the numbers in the summary!) is that crime wouldn't have risen if not for apple thefts. The bigger question is, would those thieves have stolen other items if apple products weren't so common, valuable, and portable? Or do apple products present a uniquely common, accessible, and valuable target for would be thieves? Such that without an increase in the number or thieves
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Thieves are thieves.
iGadgets are merely the path of least resistance.
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The claim (verified by the numbers in the summary!) is that crime wouldn't have risen if not for apple thefts.
The claim is actually that if we took the number of all crimes, and subtracted the number of iPhone thefts, the result would be less than the number of the previous years. And that claim is true, but meaningless.
There were many more iPhones around in 2012 than 2011. The percentage of iPhones among all phones is higher, so it would have to be expected that the number stolen would be higher. If Apple hadnl't sold any phones, almost everyone buying an iPhone would have bought some other phone, and all those
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This is a ridiculous supposition. Are we suppose to believe that the criminals responsible for these thefts were lured into stealing by the flashy Apple gizmos? Or that these criminals would reject crime and find honest work if only New York could rid itself of Apple products?
This is just another example of politicians passing the blame to something else. In this case it's Apple, as blaming Apple for life's ills is in vogue at the moment.
Thieves steal valuable things that are easy to fence. If you want to know what people covet most, take a look at what is being stolen. End of story.
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For the iPhone, it might be a simple deal. A police report is filed, the serial number is reported to Apple, and Apple reports the fact to
why not? (Score:2)
We are told to believe that guns incite people to violence.
People selectively buy into anything they want to believe in
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If your achievements are always short of your goals, doesn't that make you a loser?
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If your achievements are always short of your goals, doesn't that make you a loser?
Of course not. If A has the goal to make a million, and makes only $900,000, and B has the goal to make $10,000 and makes $12,000, who is the loser?
The _proper_ use of goals is to use them as motivational tools. The best way to set a goal is to set it so high, that it looks just barely achievable. Such a goal will usually _not_ be achieved, but leads to the highest _actual_ achievement. Setting goals that are easily achieved leads to less actual achievement (while meeting the goal), while goals that are
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This doesn't seem to generalize beyond tawdry goals of the form "receive X tokens of appreciation from others."
What happens if I have a goal like "understand quantum mechanics"?
Bullshit analysis (Score:5, Insightful)
The vast majority of car thefts now involve fuel injection cars. If you don't count those, the crime rate would be down!
Make no mistake, we, the police department, are doing a GREAT job. It's your damn newfangled fuel injection systems that are the problem!
Password to power off (Score:4, Interesting)
How about just making it require a password to power off, put it in airplane mode, or disable Find My iPhone so you can use find my phone? As it is you can still turn the phone off even if the lock screen is passworded. I don't want to have to enter a PIN every time I unlock my phone, but I also don't want a thief to be able to disable Find My iPhone (such as by turning it off), and I wouldn't mind entering a password on the rare occasions I turn the phone off or put it in airplane mode. Do any Android phones have a feature like that?
I think most thieves know to turn off an iPhone that they've stolen.
The NYPD has too much fucking money (Score:1)
From last linked TFA:
One stolen iPad was tracked to the Dominican Republic and recovered with the help of an NYPD intelligence cop assigned to Santo Domingo.
Their own "intelligence" cop in a foreign country? Bloomberg and Kelly are power crazy.
Re:The NYPD has too much fucking money (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't think you understand how politics and police in a big city work.
There's the police force that the poor get, the police force that the middle class get, and the police force that the rich get. Generally, when cops come into poor neighborhoods, it's to bash heads. In middle class neighborhoods, you get sympathetic cops who politely explain that they're too busy to investigate your report. In the rich neighborhoods, they drop everything in order to find your missing poodle.
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Once we had two detectives come to out datacenter because someone sent an email with a return address hosted by a customer. No idea whether it was a real drop box or a faked envelope From, but the complaint was made by this annoying guy that took all that nonsense seriously. So yeah, they do have resources to waste. At least they recovered stolen property here and didn't just chase ghosts.
Apple in Cahoots with the Big Apple (Score:2)
I guess we should have seen that coming, they already own the Apple Records label too. (Never would have drempt of that happening when they were still making the computers out of wood in the 1970s.)
In exchange, they will want the 'Big Apple' to now be known as the 'iApple', but after mass protests in the city they are forced to compromise to 'Bigipple'...
Silly example blaming Apple (Score:2)
Ban! (Score:3, Funny)
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Then again, now I am envisioning the i45 with a slide-to-unlock safety... *shudders*
New Yorkers, just carry a Blackberry (Score:2)
problem solved
Things I learned from this advertisement (Score:3, Insightful)
From the Article "The California-based company then informs the NYPD of the device’s current location — and it can track it even if it was reregistered with a different wireless provider."...they then boast how they have tracked a phone to brazil!?
Nobody, no-one concerned that a Apple is tracking their customers, and can do so without their knowledge.
Seriously "Do no evil?"
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Seriously "Do no evil?"
You're mistaking Apple for Google. Apple has always been evil. People like evil, as long as it looks cool.
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Seriously "Do no evil?"
You're mistaking Apple for Google. Apple has always been evil. People like evil, as long as it looks cool.
Google can track your location, they know your browsing history, your shopping habits, what hobbies you have what kind of clothes you like to wear, who your friends are, what you look like, they can rifle through your email if you use their G-mail service, they know what kind of porn you like... the list goes on, and on, and on...... and you two are worried that Apple can find out where your phones are?
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Seriously "Do no evil?"
You're mistaking Apple for Google. Apple has always been evil. People like evil, as long as it looks cool.
The meme of "looks cool" being the only reason people buy Apple is stupid and needs to die. You need to drop your blind hate and see that people buy Apple because the devices fit their needs better. That's why I bought an iPad. I really couldn't care less what I look like using it. In fact, I rarely use it in public.
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Nobody, no-one concerned that a Apple is tracking their customers, and can do so without their knowledge.
I thought that was true of any cell phone. Or is it only the SIM that can be tracked?
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From the Article "The California-based company then informs the NYPD of the device’s current location — and it can track it even if it was reregistered with a different wireless provider."...they then boast how they have tracked a phone to brazil!?
Nobody, no-one concerned that a Apple is tracking their customers, and can do so without their knowledge.
Seriously "Do no evil?"
You have to opt in and setup Find My iPhone, so I don't see how that is without their knowledge. Unless you are talking about something different?
Take it out and shoot it, please! (Score:2, Funny)
As an illustration of the problem, there were 3,890 more Apple product thefts than in 2012 than there were in 2011
That sentence is suffering horribly. Please put it out of misery.
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Hey, to the overrated troll: you're such an ass. If your brain so scrambled up that that sentence made sense to you?
Bloomberg ... (Score:2)
Apple crime in 2011? (Score:1)
Cause if there was Apple related crime in 2011, you have to remove that to see exactly what the crime rate did without Apple.
Also, a one year change does not a trend make.
NYC, you asked for this. (Score:1)
The city with the absolute highest crime rate of one of the most sought after pieces of electronics...also happens to have the most oppressive and restrictive gun laws in the entire country.
I would say I'm sorry, but I'm feeling more like a "tough shit" instead. Maybe next time you won't be so quick to give up your rights.
Have fun in your gun-free zone. Good to hear that's working out so well. I can practically smell the peace and love from here.
More crap from Bloomberg. (Score:1)
All Apple's Fault (Score:1)
The biggest type of iPhone theft (Score:2)
Is selling these above average smartphones at premium prices. You may get it "free" with your contract but you pay extra on your contract.
You might even get a contract for the same price for a Galaxy3 or an iPhone5. The iPhone buyer is being ripped off in that exampleif the Galaxy user gets a fair price.
User controlled SIM-locking (Score:1)
It the correct SIM card is not inside the phone, the phone can't turn on without a password.