New security measures for mobiles

 

A mobile phone

The new system will see a stolen mobile emitting an alarm

Security experts have devised a system which triggers a high-pitched screech
on a mobile phone if it is stolen.

 

The service is also designed to prevent thieves from using stolen phones and
accessing the data contained on them.

 

Under the new system, Remote XT, a signal is sent to the mobile once it is
reported lost or stolen, causing it to emit an alarm similar to a scream.

 

The service is backed by the Mobile Industry Crime Action Forum and is aimed
at businessmen and women.

 

The alarm noise is accompanied by a message, reading "This phone is stolen".

 

The phone is also automatically disabled, with contact numbers, texts,
images and emails removed.

 

Detective Superintendent Steve Bending, head of the National Mobile Phone
Crime Unit, said: "The NMPCU is supportive of measures that make mobile
phones

less desirable items to steal and worthless in the hands of those who seek
to profit from mobile phone criminality.

 

"Any opportunity to disable a mobile phone and render it useless, should it
be stolen, is welcomed."

 

According to the BBC's Home Affairs Correspondent, Danny Shaw, thefts of
mobile phones are on the increase.

 

Some services have been developed to block the use of stolen SIM cards and
handsets, but these are not foolproof, he went on.

 

He also added that the cost of the service will be almost £10 a month, which
may prove prohibitive to some.

 

Shadab Husain Mo: 9335206224

 

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