The Samsung Galaxy S4 now comes with a new technology that will help
users track down their missing or stolen smart phone or, in dire
situations, kill the phone.
While skilled phone hackers can circumvent phone-tracking applications – such as the popular "Find My iphone" – the LoJack
system is built into a smart phone's core, or its firmware. To unlock
the phone and turn off the tracking device, the thief would have to
destroy the firmware, in effect ruining the phone. Of course, there is
also the cathartic (and perhaps practical) benefit of being able to
"kill" a device when users are unable to retrieve it from a thief.
"Killing" a phone renders it useless, meaning that a new operating
system cannot be installed.
The feature costs $29.99 per year and includes the cost of tracking
down the phone. The LoJack software feature from Absolute Software has
previously been available only for laptops and tablets. This is the
first time that the technology will be built into the phone itself.
Building
tracking capabilities into cellphones like the Samsung Galaxy 4S
reflects the rising incidences of phone theft in the past few years,
says Mark Grace, the vice president of consumer global at Absolute Software.
The San Francisco and New York attorneys general both issued their support for the creation of a Save our Smartphones
initiative to combat this rise in cellphone thefts. In 2012, half of
all robberies in San Francisco involved a mobile device. In New York City,
20 percent of all robberies involved the theft of a smart phone – a 40
percent increase since 2011, according to a statement issued by the Save
our Smartphone coalition.
New York City has a separate Apple task force that deals solely with the theft of iPhones and iPads.
The
Samsung Galaxy 4S is the first phone to have this LoJack software
automatically built into the device, but Mr. Grace foresees the
possibility of incorporating this software into other smart phones in
the future. Though Absolute Software is able to track cellphones without
the LoJack software, the process is easier with the mechanism built
into a phone’s firmware.
Absolute says that it has been able to
retrieve three-quarters of all lost laptops, excluding the number of
devices that are permanently damaged, says Grace. The company has ties
to more than 6,600 different law enforcement agencies in more than 100
countries, and has recovered more than 30,000 devices
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