UK Mobile Providers Launch 'Kill Switch' for Stolen Phones
Auf einen Blick
- Virgin Media O2 and VodafoneThree have implemented a 'kill switch' to disable stolen, unsold smartphones from their stores.
- This aims to combat rising retail theft and the black market for stolen devices, following resistance from major manufacturers like Apple and Samsung to a universal solution.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
Two major UK mobile providers have launched a 'kill switch' for stolen, unsold smartphones to combat rising retail crime and the black market, after manufacturers resisted a universal solution.
Two of the United Kingdom’s largest mobile network providers, Virgin Media O2 and VodafoneThree, have launched a new “kill switch” technology designed to disable smartphones stolen from their retail stores. According to a report by The Financial Times, the move comes after major handset manufacturers, including Apple and Samsung, resisted pressure to introduce a broader, universal antitheft lock. The report says that the decision to deploy the tracking technology is aimed at destroying the black market for stolen devices. There has been a surge in mobile retail crimes; in London alone, phone theft affected more than 70,000 individuals last year, the report claims.
How the ‘Kill Switch’ technology works
According to people familiar with the matter, the security measure operates under strict guidelines to deter organised criminal gangs from raiding storefronts. Notably, the technology applies only to brand-new smartphones that have not yet been sold to consumers. The exact moment a phone is stolen from a shop and switched on, it is automatically flagged and logged into a specialised database run by the device manufacturer. Once recognised by the database, a remote command is triggered that renders the handset entirely unusable. Telecom operators cannot disable a phone once it has been legally purchased because the network provider is no longer the legal owner of the device. The UK rollout comes after steps previously taken by mobile network operators in the Netherlands to protect their physical stock.
Friction with tech giants and police
The report says that police forces and industry groups have urged tech manufacturers to build built-in kill switches to slash the street value of stolen electronics. Last year, Mobile UK, which is the body representing the nation's network providers, wrote to the Home Secretary seeking government intervention, pointing out that Apple already uses a similar kill-switch system for devices stolen exclusively from its own Apple Stores.
Offene Fragen
- Will other providers adopt this technology?
- Will manufacturers eventually implement a universal kill switch?
- What is the exact database mechanism used by manufacturers?