RE: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
> -Message d'origine- > > Very interesting. Openstreetmap already has a webserver that > looks up locations by URL, such as: > > http://openstreetmap.org/?lat=63.41283&lon=10.4888&zoom=15&lay > ers=B000FTF > > Would such an URL work on a MMS-capable phone? This URL is > javascript, but a few simple calculations can yield a link > directly to a tile png file instead. > > Helge Hafting The URL won't work as an sms, because it has to be wap, not http, and you can only query your provider mms server, not just any URL. But the same principle could be applied as with the script which sends back the position of your FR upon receiving a given SMS. You'll 'only' have to browse the url and extract the image part. It would be faster to implement than a 'real' mms browser i guess.. ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
KaZeR wrote: > > >> -Message d'origine- >> >> I still dream of sending "sentry:map" and get a MMS with a >> map tile back, with the location marked. Don't know if the >> freerunner can send MMS, mine certainly doesn't receive MMS. >> (instead, the telco sent an URL for downloading the test image.) >> > I'm definitely not an expert, but receiving mms is basically receiving a sms > with an url (e.g. the one from your telco), and browsing that url using wap, > without user interaction.. Same thing for posting. So, it's "only" a > software issue... Very interesting. Openstreetmap already has a webserver that looks up locations by URL, such as: http://openstreetmap.org/?lat=63.41283&lon=10.4888&zoom=15&layers=B000FTF Would such an URL work on a MMS-capable phone? This URL is javascript, but a few simple calculations can yield a link directly to a tile png file instead. Helge Hafting ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
RE: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
> -Message d'origine- > > I still dream of sending "sentry:map" and get a MMS with a > map tile back, with the location marked. Don't know if the > freerunner can send MMS, mine certainly doesn't receive MMS. > (instead, the telco sent an URL for downloading the test image.) > I'm definitely not an expert, but receiving mms is basically receiving a sms with an url (e.g. the one from your telco), and browsing that url using wap, without user interaction.. Same thing for posting. So, it's "only" a software issue... ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
Angus Ainslie wrote: > On Tue, Jan 27, 2009 at 4:23 AM, Helge Hafting > wrote: > > Later I was on a car trip, not driving. So I watched tangogps for a > > while. Then I got the idea to test again, knowing that the gps was > > working. So I sent the message again - from the phone to itself. And > > again nothing happened. The keyed message eventually showed up in the > > sms inbox, with the first letter removed. Tangogps showed movement all > > the time. I tried twice, but I never got a reply with any coordinates. > > > > If the first letter is missing then it won't work as the match has to > be complete. This seems to be some kind of network ( or possibly > Freerunner specific issue ) as I've had the missing character reported > before. I have always tested by sending from a different phone. I'll > test again using the freerunner to track itself. > I have now tested more. The freerunner running SHR (dec.16) removes the last letter (not the first), but this can be worked around by sending "sentry:locationn". It works flawlessly, I do get a location back now. SHR/FSO will probably fix that letter removal problem in a future release. I still dream of sending "sentry:map" and get a MMS with a map tile back, with the location marked. Don't know if the freerunner can send MMS, mine certainly doesn't receive MMS. (instead, the telco sent an URL for downloading the test image.) Helge Hafting ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
Angus Ainslie wrote: > On Tue, Jan 27, 2009 at 4:23 AM, Helge Hafting wrote: >> Later I was on a car trip, not driving. So I watched tangogps for a >> while. Then I got the idea to test again, knowing that the gps was >> working. So I sent the message again - from the phone to itself. And >> again nothing happened. The keyed message eventually showed up in the >> sms inbox, with the first letter removed. Tangogps showed movement all >> the time. I tried twice, but I never got a reply with any coordinates. >> > > If the first letter is missing then it won't work as the match has to > be complete. This seems to be some kind of network ( or possibly > Freerunner specific issue ) as I've had the missing character reported > before. I have always tested by sending from a different phone. I'll > test again using the freerunner to track itself. Only these messages had the first letter removed, not other test messages. And the usual message receive screen didn't come up. The messages just appeared in the inbox. So I guessed the keyed messages had been processed differently somehow. I will try to test more. Maybe the inbox was too full? Other messages gets delayed in such cases, could that happen to keyed messages as well? An unrelated idea: When tangogps is installed, how about locating a useful map tile for the position? Add a location pointer, and send it as a MMS image? Most phones can display an image, and you won't need to look up the coordinates manually anywhere. The most useful tile would be one that doesn't have the position too close to the edge, and maximally zoomed in. (Depends on what tiles there are.) Helge Hafting ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
arne anka wrote: > i still think, all these ideas to make the thief repent ... uh ... return > the phone or track it, are rather pipe dreams -- but anyway ... It isn't always thievery. What do you do if you find a phone? It is easier to return if it states who owns it as soon as you turn it on. None of that cumbersome "call every contact to see if they know the owner". Especially on such a "unfamiliar" phone. Also, location reported through gps is useful if you simply forgot it and have no idea where, after a busy day. Friends house? Some restaurant? Petrol station? Helge Hafting ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
2009/1/28 arne anka : > i still think, all these ideas to make the thief repent ... uh ... return > the phone or track it, are rather pipe dreams -- but anyway ... Locked WinMo devices optionally display a message (e.g. for contact/reward details), in addition to the keypad for unlocking the phone, when switched on or woken up. This would allow return of the phone whether it was stolen or simply lost. Bricking the phone won't get it back, but having the above, plus having the phone report its location regularly, would seem to maximise chances of recovery. ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
i still think, all these ideas to make the thief repent ... uh ... return the phone or track it, are rather pipe dreams -- but anyway ... be it for this purpose or another: when finally the migration to qi is done and over, the flash partition containing the kernel read by u-boot should be available for things and data not easily removed. maybe some ideas spring to mind how to use it (with a nag screen/noise, emergency delete of data, whatever)? ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
bburde...@comcast.net wrote: > If you don't want to risk being sued for a booby trapped phone, how Hard to prove whose phone it was, after it exploded. And then they have to prove that it was you who set the trap. Still, not recommended. > about at least a way to render the it useless to thieves? > > For instance, you could make it unbootable from a zero power situation, > and then combine that with a rapid power discharge. If the thief leaves > it uncharged for even a day, its bricked! At least the thief can't use it that way, but he'll just throw it away. If you want it back, consider software that does this: 1. Sends a sms with gps location now and then. But not so often as to use up the battery quickly. 2. Replace the usual ringtone with "Help, this phone is stolen!" 3. Replace the window manager with a single window that reads: - This phone belong to: name address Please return it for a $nn refund. - There should be no user interface here, no buttons to press and no way out. (If you get it back - reflash or log in with ssh to get it out of "stolen mode". You should have a nice long root password.) Some thieves might go for the refund, when they find that the phone cannot be used at all. Others might throw it away. Someone else might find it and go for the refund, or you might be able to find it at the reported gps location. Still, if you want to brick the phone badly - overwrite the gsm modem firmware. No more calls! Then overwrite both nand flash and nor flash - nor more boot. Or maybe the boot message could show the "stolen" message above, and shut down again after a minute to conserve battery. After this, a debug board will be necessary. Helge Hafting ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
>> Sorry for you, hope you will be over it soon and up and running with a >> new one. >> >> For any ideas regarding this issue, please document them in the Wiki: >> http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Anti-Theft_Mode > > I think that someone who has stolen a FR will not be willing to use it as > a > phone and perhaps not even has the knowledge to make something useful > with it. Therefor I would insert a small offer in the case of the FR > saying "Call me at phone X and I will pay you Y on device return." > I do this as well with my FreeBSD based laptops. > > matthias I'd prefer to lose my FR rather than paying my robbers for something that is mine, and thus giving them an incentive to keep robbing. ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
but if the phone automatically send a notification if there is a different sim insterted? that notification can contain the new cell phone number and as many of his contacts as you choose On Tue, Jan 27, 2009 at 12:53 PM, wrote: >>> >>> And when you think you've tracked down the thief and are close to him, >>> send >>> an sms to make it play some music really really loud, and go bang the >>> thief >>> on the head :) >> >> Sounds fun. I send the SMS, and suddenly a piercing siren goes off from >> the >> guy 10 feet away, so I tackle him and take back my phone. :D I like how >> you >> think. > > I don't like spoiling your fun, but the first thing the thief will do is > turning off the device (if he can!). Otherwise, simply calling your phone > would do the same effect. > > Next, he will change the SIM, of course. If he finds the phone useful in > any way. > > > ___ > Openmoko community mailing list > community@lists.openmoko.org > http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community > ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
>> >> And when you think you've tracked down the thief and are close to him, >> send >> an sms to make it play some music really really loud, and go bang the >> thief >> on the head :) > > Sounds fun. I send the SMS, and suddenly a piercing siren goes off from > the > guy 10 feet away, so I tackle him and take back my phone. :D I like how > you > think. I don't like spoiling your fun, but the first thing the thief will do is turning off the device (if he can!). Otherwise, simply calling your phone would do the same effect. Next, he will change the SIM, of course. If he finds the phone useful in any way. ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
i'm assuming we don't want to brick it, because the thief is not very likely to return the phone if it doesn't work, nor can we track it if it isn't charged. He'(ll just dump the phone. sending gps location (if available), cell tower information and SIM card info (contacts, own number...) in the background to a predefined cellphone number/upload it to a server or e-mail it (when internet is available) seems to me the smarter choice. y On Tue, Jan 27, 2009 at 6:14 PM, wrote: > If you don't want to risk being sued for a booby trapped phone, how > about at least a way to render the it useless to thieves? > > For instance, you could make it unbootable from a zero power situation, > and then combine that with a rapid power discharge. If the thief leaves > it uncharged for even a day, its bricked! > > > Jeff Sadowski wrote: >> Oooh :-) Idea: Make it shock the user if its not the right user. I >> smell smoke I think it is coming from over there. Hey look there is my >> phone. next to a flaming POS. >> >> On Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Lothar Behrens >> wrote: >>> Hi, >>> sorry for you all that lost your phone, stolen or lost anyhow by being >>> careless. I also had lost a phone, but not my FR :-) >>> I read the thread, and think about my contract. I have no gprs as of my old >>> phone didn't let me opening >>> web or wap pages. >>> I have some questions and ideas that are in my brain :-) >>> Is there any way to use analog modem connections ? >>> I don't know how much CPU power is needed but when possible a phone could >>> send more data to a dedicated >>> number we could provide for that. >>> If a real modem connection couldn't be used, what about creating a tone >>> modulation for the data to be send >>> as a 'spoken' message to be send back to a number as a voice recorder. >>> The voice recorder then (a Linux PC :-) could decode the data and store the >>> data. >>> All the data could be collected on a web service to probably get the bad >>> guys behind to give that information to >>> the police. >>> The web service also could provide information about stolen devices, thus >>> when a phone gets any wlan connection, >>> it could check for stolen state. This is not that spoof able I think, >>> because the web sevice may be as usual password protected. >>> But the server could provide sms, mms or phone gateways for fallback >>> options. More gateways could be provided by us. >>> The new gateway information could be uploaded by interacting with the user >>> (software updates :-) >>> If a phone didn't have gprs, sms, mms, or wlan, sending prepared 'data >>> voices' would be an option. It didn't need to send much at first to get >>> an answer about the stolen state in that way. I think the recorded data >>> could be decoded in both directions, you don't need >>> much cpu power, because it will be unidirectional, or let the 'protocol' >>> enough time between packed sent and anser packets >>> for decoding. >>> Doing an active voice call may save us the cost of callbacks or sending back >>> sms. With a proper longtime protocol with long pauses or a >>> better solution a lot could be done. >>> Usually you could activate this when the sim card get's changed without any >>> notice to the user. He should still use the phone a while >>> to collect information. We then could start a preinstalled application to >>> authenticate the sim card change. If not options are many. >>> The PIN entry of the normal card could be replaced by the PIN you >>> provide. The user then wouldn't realize it, but claims to enter >>> the correct, we simply accept, but start the timer for the above actions. >>> Or we leave the user in claim that the documentation of it's sim card >>> provider doesn't seem to be correct and he/she must issue >>> a call with the service provider. >>> At that point, the service provider couldn't help for that special phone. >>> The new 'user' HAS to contact the manufacturer and so on >>> you probably get your phone back, because the manufacturer should request >>> for sending back the phone. >>> Getting the state of stolen, the phone could anyway send a message to a >>> police station near the user with spd-say, after >>> the 'anti-theft' server has located the next police station's telephone >>> number with any of the above options sent back to the >>> phone. (Maybe with manual data entry of the phone numbers by us users with >>> POI collection, hehe tangoGPS :-) >>> That way the phone could help actively. Not only 'data voices' could be >>> sent. >>> Also the collected wlan, phone towers, GPS, voice, phone numbers and what >>> else could help to locate the guys behind, >>> as the phones will walk up to the key guys before it would reselled. (Where >>> they all are located would be very nice POI data) >>> With that data, we could help the police. >>> A note about the attack to people currently having your phone: They may not >>> know, that they have a stolen phone, thus >>> you get to be a 'criminal' and bewar
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
bburde...@comcast.net wrote: > If you don't want to risk being sued for a booby trapped phone, how > about at least a way to render the it useless to thieves? I think that the majority of thieves is not technically inclined, thus our FR is _already_ rather useless for him/her.. > For instance, you could make it unbootable from a zero power situation, > and then combine that with a rapid power discharge. If the thief leaves > it uncharged for even a day, its bricked! LOL :) yeah.. let's implement that.. oh wait.. this feature is already implemented.. no battery voltage -> "bricked" (unless one knows what to do) Cheers, -- Thomas -~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~ The use of anthropomorphic terminology when dealing with computing systems is a symptom of professional immaturity. - Edsgar W. Dijkstra -~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~ ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
If you don't want to risk being sued for a booby trapped phone, how about at least a way to render the it useless to thieves? For instance, you could make it unbootable from a zero power situation, and then combine that with a rapid power discharge. If the thief leaves it uncharged for even a day, its bricked! Jeff Sadowski wrote: > Oooh :-) Idea: Make it shock the user if its not the right user. I > smell smoke I think it is coming from over there. Hey look there is my > phone. next to a flaming POS. > > On Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Lothar Behrens > wrote: >> Hi, >> sorry for you all that lost your phone, stolen or lost anyhow by being >> careless. I also had lost a phone, but not my FR :-) >> I read the thread, and think about my contract. I have no gprs as of my old >> phone didn't let me opening >> web or wap pages. >> I have some questions and ideas that are in my brain :-) >> Is there any way to use analog modem connections ? >> I don't know how much CPU power is needed but when possible a phone could >> send more data to a dedicated >> number we could provide for that. >> If a real modem connection couldn't be used, what about creating a tone >> modulation for the data to be send >> as a 'spoken' message to be send back to a number as a voice recorder. >> The voice recorder then (a Linux PC :-) could decode the data and store the >> data. >> All the data could be collected on a web service to probably get the bad >> guys behind to give that information to >> the police. >> The web service also could provide information about stolen devices, thus >> when a phone gets any wlan connection, >> it could check for stolen state. This is not that spoof able I think, >> because the web sevice may be as usual password protected. >> But the server could provide sms, mms or phone gateways for fallback >> options. More gateways could be provided by us. >> The new gateway information could be uploaded by interacting with the user >> (software updates :-) >> If a phone didn't have gprs, sms, mms, or wlan, sending prepared 'data >> voices' would be an option. It didn't need to send much at first to get >> an answer about the stolen state in that way. I think the recorded data >> could be decoded in both directions, you don't need >> much cpu power, because it will be unidirectional, or let the 'protocol' >> enough time between packed sent and anser packets >> for decoding. >> Doing an active voice call may save us the cost of callbacks or sending back >> sms. With a proper longtime protocol with long pauses or a >> better solution a lot could be done. >> Usually you could activate this when the sim card get's changed without any >> notice to the user. He should still use the phone a while >> to collect information. We then could start a preinstalled application to >> authenticate the sim card change. If not options are many. >> The PIN entry of the normal card could be replaced by the PIN you >> provide. The user then wouldn't realize it, but claims to enter >> the correct, we simply accept, but start the timer for the above actions. >> Or we leave the user in claim that the documentation of it's sim card >> provider doesn't seem to be correct and he/she must issue >> a call with the service provider. >> At that point, the service provider couldn't help for that special phone. >> The new 'user' HAS to contact the manufacturer and so on >> you probably get your phone back, because the manufacturer should request >> for sending back the phone. >> Getting the state of stolen, the phone could anyway send a message to a >> police station near the user with spd-say, after >> the 'anti-theft' server has located the next police station's telephone >> number with any of the above options sent back to the >> phone. (Maybe with manual data entry of the phone numbers by us users with >> POI collection, hehe tangoGPS :-) >> That way the phone could help actively. Not only 'data voices' could be >> sent. >> Also the collected wlan, phone towers, GPS, voice, phone numbers and what >> else could help to locate the guys behind, >> as the phones will walk up to the key guys before it would reselled. (Where >> they all are located would be very nice POI data) >> With that data, we could help the police. >> A note about the attack to people currently having your phone: They may not >> know, that they have a stolen phone, thus >> you get to be a 'criminal' and beware, you may also get reatacked by the >> person :-) >> Giving the police the collected data, would propably help much more. >> What about all my stupid brain stuff ? >> Discuss about the possibilities - even stupid ideas as the old 'acustic >> coupler'. You don't really need all the modern GPRS stuff :-) >> If that is possible also the cost of operation is not very high I think - >> even you change your card (you know to start a separate unlocker) >> Lothar >> >> -- | Rapid Prototyping | XSLT Codegeneration | http://www.lollisoft.de >> Lothar Behrens >> Heinrich-
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
On Tue, Jan 27, 2009 at 4:23 AM, Helge Hafting wrote: > Later I was on a car trip, not driving. So I watched tangogps for a > while. Then I got the idea to test again, knowing that the gps was > working. So I sent the message again - from the phone to itself. And > again nothing happened. The keyed message eventually showed up in the > sms inbox, with the first letter removed. Tangogps showed movement all > the time. I tried twice, but I never got a reply with any coordinates. > If the first letter is missing then it won't work as the match has to be complete. This seems to be some kind of network ( or possibly Freerunner specific issue ) as I've had the missing character reported before. I have always tested by sending from a different phone. I'll test again using the freerunner to track itself. >> What distro did you try it on ? >> > SHR of dec.16, which I still use. A good distro in that calls, sms, > music, and gps all works - although it could use some polishing. > >> Did you run it from the command line and check what status messages it >> was sending ? >> > I didn't think of that, it is worth a try. > > >> It works but can take a very very long time to get a fix and return >> the SMS you are waiting for. >> > I know - so therefore I tested it when I already had a good fix. gpsd is > supposed to be able to serve several clients at the same time. > SHR uses fso-gpsd and the will handle multiple clients. Angus -- Angus Ainslie http://www.handheldshell.com/ ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
Angus Ainslie wrote: > On Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 6:19 AM, Helge Hafting wrote: >> There is a program around that is supposed to look for a special keyword >> in a sms, and send a gps reading back. It didn't work when I tried it, >> but this appraoch can be developed into something more robust. Another >> other security idea: Send an SMS to put the phone in "stolen" modus. (Do >> that quickly, before they change the sim card.) >> > > Are you talking about sms-sentry ? > > Which part didn't work ? I sent the message, from the phone to itself. This was right after installing it. Of course, there was no gps fix inside the building, I didn't expect that to work well. Later I was on a car trip, not driving. So I watched tangogps for a while. Then I got the idea to test again, knowing that the gps was working. So I sent the message again - from the phone to itself. And again nothing happened. The keyed message eventually showed up in the sms inbox, with the first letter removed. Tangogps showed movement all the time. I tried twice, but I never got a reply with any coordinates. > What distro did you try it on ? > SHR of dec.16, which I still use. A good distro in that calls, sms, music, and gps all works - although it could use some polishing. > Did you run it from the command line and check what status messages it > was sending ? > I didn't think of that, it is worth a try. > It works but can take a very very long time to get a fix and return > the SMS you are waiting for. > I know - so therefore I tested it when I already had a good fix. gpsd is supposed to be able to serve several clients at the same time. Helge Hafting ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
The Digital Pioneer wrote: > And when you think you've tracked down the thief and are close to > him, send an sms to make it play some music really really loud, and > go bang the thief on the head :) > > Sounds fun. I send the SMS, and suddenly a piercing siren goes off from > the guy 10 feet away, so I tackle him and take back my phone. :D I like > how you think. > > Just one little consideration: how best to turn off stolen-mode when I > get it back? Sending an SMS won't do (way too easy to spoof), it needs > to be something that can only be done by SSH or the like I think. Enter the 20-letter password that only you know about - or reflash. The thief also has the option of reflashing - but most of them don't know how. If they did - they'd likely be able to earn better working with electronics/computers. If you really hate thieves, fill all free space inside the case with explosive. Send the stolen phone a sms containing the key for self-destruct mode. In this mode it explodes a few seconds after accepting a call - the maximum damage moment when you get both the hand and the head. I would not recommend this though. It'd be illegal most places, and you'd have to be really confident about programming the trigger. (And then there is static electricity...) A safer self-destruct mode would be to erase all the flashes, including the one in the gsm modem. No boot or usb-based reflash after that, and thieves will not likely bother trying a debug board "to see if it can be fixed". If they are that good, they probably make a decent living unlocking/servicing other brands of phone already. Such a self-destruct might be useful when the phone is stolen on a trip and you don't want to follow the thief into a dubious and unknown district. And you probably don't have all the tracking equipment (extra gps & phone) with you either. Helge Hafting ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
El día Tuesday, January 27, 2009 a las 10:58:49AM +0100, arne anka escribió: > > I don't know why you guys assume that there will be another user. A > > scenario > > that I think is more probable: > > > > The thief steals the phone, immediately turns it off by taking out the > > battery. He then takes it to some 'dealer'. The dealer says, 'what the > > > > is this, I will never sell it', and throws it away. > > > exactly. > therefore i think, the proposed label inside the back cover, offering a > reward when contacted via / and fr returned, would be far > more promising. exactly; mine has a label inside: +---+ | If you got this device, let's | | asume you have found it, please | | call +49-89-61308-351. I offer a | | 100 Euro reward on device return. | +---+ HIH :-) matthias -- Matthias Apitz Manager Technical Support - OCLC GmbH Gruenwalder Weg 28g - 82041 Oberhaching - Germany t +49-89-61308 351 - f +49-89-61308 399 - m +49-170-4527211 e - w http://www.oclc.org/ http://www.UnixArea.de/ b http://gurucubano.blogspot.com/ SPAMer of the year: Subject: Alle Software ist Deutsche Sprachen >From: -40 % die Neujahrsaktion ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
RE: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
> -Message d'origine- > > exactly. > therefore i think, the proposed label inside the back cover, > offering a > reward when contacted via / and fr returned, > would be far > more promising. Would sound like a trap for the thief, no? (even if it's worth trying). I got a bag stolen in train last month. It only contained papers for my work, my mail from the day, and my glasses. Bag itself was worth something like 10€. I guess it ended in a trash. ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
> I don't know why you guys assume that there will be another user. A > scenario > that I think is more probable: > > The thief steals the phone, immediately turns it off by taking out the > battery. He then takes it to some 'dealer'. The dealer says, 'what the > > is this, I will never sell it', and throws it away. exactly. therefore i think, the proposed label inside the back cover, offering a reward when contacted via / and fr returned, would be far more promising. ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
2009/1/27 Lothar Behrens > Hi, > > sorry for you all that lost your phone, stolen or lost anyhow by being > careless. I also had lost a phone, but not my FR :-) > > I read the thread, and think about my contract. I have no gprs as of my old > phone didn't let me opening > web or wap pages. > > I have some questions and ideas that are in my brain :-) > I don't know why you guys assume that there will be another user. A scenario that I think is more probable: The thief steals the phone, immediately turns it off by taking out the battery. He then takes it to some 'dealer'. The dealer says, 'what the is this, I will never sell it', and throws it away. ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
Oooh :-) Idea: Make it shock the user if its not the right user. I smell smoke I think it is coming from over there. Hey look there is my phone. next to a flaming POS. On Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Lothar Behrens wrote: > Hi, > sorry for you all that lost your phone, stolen or lost anyhow by being > careless. I also had lost a phone, but not my FR :-) > I read the thread, and think about my contract. I have no gprs as of my old > phone didn't let me opening > web or wap pages. > I have some questions and ideas that are in my brain :-) > Is there any way to use analog modem connections ? > I don't know how much CPU power is needed but when possible a phone could > send more data to a dedicated > number we could provide for that. > If a real modem connection couldn't be used, what about creating a tone > modulation for the data to be send > as a 'spoken' message to be send back to a number as a voice recorder. > The voice recorder then (a Linux PC :-) could decode the data and store the > data. > All the data could be collected on a web service to probably get the bad > guys behind to give that information to > the police. > The web service also could provide information about stolen devices, thus > when a phone gets any wlan connection, > it could check for stolen state. This is not that spoof able I think, > because the web sevice may be as usual password protected. > But the server could provide sms, mms or phone gateways for fallback > options. More gateways could be provided by us. > The new gateway information could be uploaded by interacting with the user > (software updates :-) > If a phone didn't have gprs, sms, mms, or wlan, sending prepared 'data > voices' would be an option. It didn't need to send much at first to get > an answer about the stolen state in that way. I think the recorded data > could be decoded in both directions, you don't need > much cpu power, because it will be unidirectional, or let the 'protocol' > enough time between packed sent and anser packets > for decoding. > Doing an active voice call may save us the cost of callbacks or sending back > sms. With a proper longtime protocol with long pauses or a > better solution a lot could be done. > Usually you could activate this when the sim card get's changed without any > notice to the user. He should still use the phone a while > to collect information. We then could start a preinstalled application to > authenticate the sim card change. If not options are many. > The PIN entry of the normal card could be replaced by the PIN you > provide. The user then wouldn't realize it, but claims to enter > the correct, we simply accept, but start the timer for the above actions. > Or we leave the user in claim that the documentation of it's sim card > provider doesn't seem to be correct and he/she must issue > a call with the service provider. > At that point, the service provider couldn't help for that special phone. > The new 'user' HAS to contact the manufacturer and so on > you probably get your phone back, because the manufacturer should request > for sending back the phone. > Getting the state of stolen, the phone could anyway send a message to a > police station near the user with spd-say, after > the 'anti-theft' server has located the next police station's telephone > number with any of the above options sent back to the > phone. (Maybe with manual data entry of the phone numbers by us users with > POI collection, hehe tangoGPS :-) > That way the phone could help actively. Not only 'data voices' could be > sent. > Also the collected wlan, phone towers, GPS, voice, phone numbers and what > else could help to locate the guys behind, > as the phones will walk up to the key guys before it would reselled. (Where > they all are located would be very nice POI data) > With that data, we could help the police. > A note about the attack to people currently having your phone: They may not > know, that they have a stolen phone, thus > you get to be a 'criminal' and beware, you may also get reatacked by the > person :-) > Giving the police the collected data, would propably help much more. > What about all my stupid brain stuff ? > Discuss about the possibilities - even stupid ideas as the old 'acustic > coupler'. You don't really need all the modern GPRS stuff :-) > If that is possible also the cost of operation is not very high I think - > even you change your card (you know to start a separate unlocker) > Lothar > > -- | Rapid Prototyping | XSLT Codegeneration | http://www.lollisoft.de > Lothar Behrens > Heinrich-Scheufelen-Platz 2 > 73252 Lenningen > > > > > > > > > ___ > Openmoko community mailing list > community@lists.openmoko.org > http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community > > ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
Hi, sorry for you all that lost your phone, stolen or lost anyhow by being careless. I also had lost a phone, but not my FR :-) I read the thread, and think about my contract. I have no gprs as of my old phone didn't let me opening web or wap pages. I have some questions and ideas that are in my brain :-) Is there any way to use analog modem connections ? I don't know how much CPU power is needed but when possible a phone could send more data to a dedicated number we could provide for that. If a real modem connection couldn't be used, what about creating a tone modulation for the data to be send as a 'spoken' message to be send back to a number as a voice recorder. The voice recorder then (a Linux PC :-) could decode the data and store the data. All the data could be collected on a web service to probably get the bad guys behind to give that information to the police. The web service also could provide information about stolen devices, thus when a phone gets any wlan connection, it could check for stolen state. This is not that spoof able I think, because the web sevice may be as usual password protected. But the server could provide sms, mms or phone gateways for fallback options. More gateways could be provided by us. The new gateway information could be uploaded by interacting with the user (software updates :-) If a phone didn't have gprs, sms, mms, or wlan, sending prepared 'data voices' would be an option. It didn't need to send much at first to get an answer about the stolen state in that way. I think the recorded data could be decoded in both directions, you don't need much cpu power, because it will be unidirectional, or let the 'protocol' enough time between packed sent and anser packets for decoding. Doing an active voice call may save us the cost of callbacks or sending back sms. With a proper longtime protocol with long pauses or a better solution a lot could be done. Usually you could activate this when the sim card get's changed without any notice to the user. He should still use the phone a while to collect information. We then could start a preinstalled application to authenticate the sim card change. If not options are many. The PIN entry of the normal card could be replaced by the PIN you provide. The user then wouldn't realize it, but claims to enter the correct, we simply accept, but start the timer for the above actions. Or we leave the user in claim that the documentation of it's sim card provider doesn't seem to be correct and he/she must issue a call with the service provider. At that point, the service provider couldn't help for that special phone. The new 'user' HAS to contact the manufacturer and so on you probably get your phone back, because the manufacturer should request for sending back the phone. Getting the state of stolen, the phone could anyway send a message to a police station near the user with spd-say, after the 'anti-theft' server has located the next police station's telephone number with any of the above options sent back to the phone. (Maybe with manual data entry of the phone numbers by us users with POI collection, hehe tangoGPS :-) That way the phone could help actively. Not only 'data voices' could be sent. Also the collected wlan, phone towers, GPS, voice, phone numbers and what else could help to locate the guys behind, as the phones will walk up to the key guys before it would reselled. (Where they all are located would be very nice POI data) With that data, we could help the police. A note about the attack to people currently having your phone: They may not know, that they have a stolen phone, thus you get to be a 'criminal' and beware, you may also get reatacked by the person :-) Giving the police the collected data, would propably help much more. What about all my stupid brain stuff ? Discuss about the possibilities - even stupid ideas as the old 'acustic coupler'. You don't really need all the modern GPRS stuff :-) If that is possible also the cost of operation is not very high I think - even you change your card (you know to start a separate unlocker) Lothar -- | Rapid Prototyping | XSLT Codegeneration | http://www.lollisoft.de Lothar Behrens Heinrich-Scheufelen-Platz 2 73252 Lenningen ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
On Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 6:19 AM, Helge Hafting wrote: > There is a program around that is supposed to look for a special keyword > in a sms, and send a gps reading back. It didn't work when I tried it, > but this appraoch can be developed into something more robust. Another > other security idea: Send an SMS to put the phone in "stolen" modus. (Do > that quickly, before they change the sim card.) > Are you talking about sms-sentry ? Which part didn't work ? What distro did you try it on ? Did you run it from the command line and check what status messages it was sending ? It works but can take a very very long time to get a fix and return the SMS you are waiting for. -- Angus Ainslie http://www.handheldshell.com/ ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
Wiadomość Oryginalna Od: Helge Hafting > Also, a stolen phone could wait for a special message. If you give it up > because the telco and police won't bother - have the phone brick > itself by wiping out its flash memory. Or better, change the boot to display > "This phone is stolen from . . ." The thief throws it away - with luck, > someone else finds and returns it. > Another idea of the like: The phone is about to be stolen by muggers, the owner uses some button combo (both buttons for 3 sec?) to enable a special lock mimicking a broken screen - displaying some colorful strips, changing when the phone is being tilted (that's about what it looks like when the connector strip is damaged). This should not go away with a reboot - random text scrolling through the screen may even help with the illusion of the phone being broken. It's likely that the phone will get thrown away (or destroyed...). It might be difficult to retrieve it, though, when the battery becomes empty. ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
> > And when you think you've tracked down the thief and are close to him, send > an sms to make it play some music really really loud, and go bang the thief > on the head :) Sounds fun. I send the SMS, and suddenly a piercing siren goes off from the guy 10 feet away, so I tackle him and take back my phone. :D I like how you think. Just one little consideration: how best to turn off stolen-mode when I get it back? Sending an SMS won't do (way too easy to spoof), it needs to be something that can only be done by SSH or the like I think. -- Thanks, The Digital Pioneer ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
2009/1/26 Helge Hafting > Also, a stolen phone could wait for a special message. If you give it up > because the telco and police won't bother - have the phone brick > itself by wiping out its flash memory. Or better, change the boot to > display > "This phone is stolen from . . ." The thief throws it away - with luck, > someone else finds and returns it. > > And when you think you've tracked down the thief and are close to him, send an sms to make it play some music really really loud, and go bang the thief on the head :) ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 fredrik normann escribió: > I'm a bit sad today, yesterday someone stole my phone. I helped a guy in > the street calling his girlfriend, (or that what he said) and when I got > distracted by a friend of him that asked for a cigarette he just ran > away I can only blame my self for being stupid This happend in > Montevideo Uruguay. Just to make you aware, at work we have bought three Freerunners, two of which have been stolen from checked baggage on flights from the United States to Venezuela and between Venezuela and Colombia. They also stole the chargers, leaving other electronic goods intact. Since airlines don't hold liability for any goods on checked baggage anyway, I'd strongly advise against carrying the phones in checked baggage (and exercising common sense in the rest of cases) especially while travelling to LatAm. Jose PS: on the funny side, I'm sure this will boost Freerunner's popularity on the mass market :) -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.4.9 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iEYEARECAAYFAkl9umwACgkQUWAsjQBcO4KZRgCfYwamZ9Sf0/G+91fxMSLlM5vd yaAAni3dueaUnWUL514qZx6XF+1u8U76 =jRsN -END PGP SIGNATURE- ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
The Digital Pioneer wrote: > Indeed, GPS fixes are tough to get, but they can be done. Just out of > curiosity, can the telco really do all that passive triangulation (or > more importantly, can I) they talk about in the movies? :P They have to do some of that anyway, just to make mobile roaming work at all. A phone that is "on" but not in use, still talk to the towers regularly. This so they know what tower to use, _if_ a call suddenly comes in. Let the phone rest atop a bad FM radio, and you will hear this in the form on radio noise now and then. You will also hear noise immediately before a call or sms comes in. When the phone is "heard" by one or more towers, the telco knows that it is in an area near all those towers. The more towers that hear the phone, the smaller the area because towers are spread and their range overlap only partially. Some towers are directional. Some towers gets a better connection to the phone than others - the phone is likely closer to those. This information alone gives you a good idea of where it is, especially in cities where towers are packed densely. I seem to recall that the gsm protocol lets the telco adjust a phone's signal strength. They generally go as low as possible, so it won't cause unnecessary interference elsewhere. They can tell the phone to vary the strength in order to measure from several towers. If they have sufficiently precise timers, then they can measure the distance from several towers too. This takes advantage of the fact that radio waves move at the speed of light, and so they arrive at different towers at a different time. 3 or more towers can then pinpoint the phone location with great precision, using exactly the same sort of calculation as a GPS unit uses when finding its position based on timing differences between 3 or more satellites. A third option is highly directional antennas. I don't think telcos bother with that though. Expensive installations and not needed for normal operation. I don't know if they use precision timers, but they can definitely see how the thief roam around. When he goes home, the police may have an idea about who has a criminal record in that area. There is a program around that is supposed to look for a special keyword in a sms, and send a gps reading back. It didn't work when I tried it, but this appraoch can be developed into something more robust. Another other security idea: Send an SMS to put the phone in "stolen" modus. (Do that quickly, before they change the sim card.) Stolen mode: * Send gps coordinates regularly, by SMS to a configured number. * Send a copy of every sms sent and received to the same place. * Send the phone log whenever a call is made * Send details about any new SIM card inserted. * If there is enough disk space, record conversations and play them back to a configured number when the thief isn't using the phone. Could be interesting. Also, a stolen phone could wait for a special message. If you give it up because the telco and police won't bother - have the phone brick itself by wiping out its flash memory. Or better, change the boot to display "This phone is stolen from . . ." The thief throws it away - with luck, someone else finds and returns it. Helge Hafting ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
> especially in Russia itself, i.e. outside Moscow. you made my day! ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
El día Monday, January 26, 2009 a las 10:20:09AM +0100, Pander escribió: > Sorry for you, hope you will be over it soon and up and running with a > new one. > > For any ideas regarding this issue, please document them in the Wiki: > http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Anti-Theft_Mode I think that someone who has stolen a FR will not be willing to use it as a phone and perhaps not even has the knowledge to make something useful with it. Therefor I would insert a small offer in the case of the FR saying "Call me at phone X and I will pay you Y on device return." I do this as well with my FreeBSD based laptops. matthias -- Matthias Apitz Manager Technical Support - OCLC GmbH Gruenwalder Weg 28g - 82041 Oberhaching - Germany t +49-89-61308 351 - f +49-89-61308 399 - m +49-170-4527211 e - w http://www.oclc.org/ http://www.UnixArea.de/ b http://gurucubano.blogspot.com/ SPAMer of the year: Subject: Alle Software ist Deutsche Sprachen >From: -40 % die Neujahrsaktion ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
Sorry for you, hope you will be over it soon and up and running with a new one. For any ideas regarding this issue, please document them in the Wiki: http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Anti-Theft_Mode fredrik normann wrote: > I'm a bit sad today, yesterday someone stole my phone. I helped a guy in > the street calling his girlfriend, (or that what he said) and when I got > distracted by a friend of him that asked for a cigarette he just ran > away I can only blame my self for being stupid This happend in > Montevideo Uruguay. > > This episode made me think of having some kind of tracking program. > > This is the idea: > When someone inserts a new simcard that is not authorized in someway, it > will start to send it's position via sms to a predefined number or a > sms-email gateway. This program could easily be disabled by a > knowledgeable user but when random people just take your phone, you can > asume that they don't know how to flash the phone. > > This is a very rough description of the idea, but I've just been > thinking about it today... It's really sad to not have a Neo anymore > when I finnaly started to love my phone and I don't have money to buy a > new one... gah > > -fredrik-normann- > > > > > ___ > Openmoko community mailing list > community@lists.openmoko.org > http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
2009/1/26 George Brooke > On Sunday 25 January 2009 23:47:07 fredrik normann wrote: > > This episode made me think of having some kind of tracking program. > Don't worry, just wait until he turns up here asking for help with the > phone > he just stole... > LOL :) this should be added to http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Jokes Nicola ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
On 26/01/2009 00:47, fredrik normann wrote: | ... I can only blame my self for being stupid don't blame yourself, this are things that happen :( I think what you are thinking about is possible to do. I was thinking for something about this. Now I have something else to complete, but when I will finish, I will take in consideration your idea. I think is something a lot of us need. ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
On Sun, 25 Jan 2009 20:10:54 -0600, The Digital Pioneer wrote: > Indeed, GPS fixes are tough to get, but they can be done. Just out of > curiosity, can the telco really do all that passive triangulation (or more > importantly, can I) they talk about in the movies? :P > > -- > Thanks, > > The Digital Pioneer http://n2.nabble.com/Future-of-location-services-on-OM-td2136697ef1958.html Some of the points mentioned within are that with the available databases of cell-tower locations and the information provided by the towers (including range within 500m IIRC) the triangulation accuracy can be pretty good, provided multiple towers are 'visible' and that urban canyons aren't causing too much multipath madness. It's also potentially helpful just to know location "within 5 km", to speed up the 'assisted' part of AGPS. j -- Joel Newkirk http://jthinks.com (blog) http://newkirk.us/om (FR stuff) ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
The Digital Pioneer пишет: > This is an excellent idea. I've been wondering about this. If I had > GPRS, I would SSH in (possible? Getting the IP would be tricky) and pull > GPS coordinates. But I don't have GPRS. I think it would be good to > implement some kind of SIM-based security, along with a way to send some > kind of panic SMS. Both would activate some kind of daemon that pulls > coords from GPS whenever possible and sends them back to you. Maybe have > it call you at home and a TTS engine gives them to you if you can't get > SMS without your phone. Just some ideas. Would be AWESOME to have a > phone that works to return to its owner though. Lord of the Rings like. :P > > As you maybe can tell, I've considered this a little just in case > someone steals my $400 baby. I've already thought about something like that when I bought the device, primarily because street robberies are still very common in Russia, especially in Russia itself, i.e. outside Moscow. However, there is one serious problem with this: the device can be easily reflashed. And robbers usually do not use stolen phones themselves, but sell them to second-hand phone resellers, who usually have staff with educated engineers. And even if we had some protection for flashing, like password in u-boot, there is not much we can do about people who have access to JTAG and other sophisticated debugging hardware, and used to cracking (reflashing, unlocking, messing with IMEI, ...) proprietary phones with no documentation at all, like open wiki with step-by-step instructions. ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
Apparently yes: here in Oz you can go to your telco and get the phone disabled if its been stolen - (tahts the phone itself, not the SIM is prevented from connecting - via IMIE I think). The cops can get location info, thoughs it is apparently more like "somewhere about there" in accuracy. Thats why I suggested wifi location like Skyhook - I think gps is a really flakey solution (going by experience with the FR) - the likely hood of a flat battery before you get a fix in most scenarios is very high, and what if the user notices it - unless you start working like a rootkit and hiding the app, which is starting to get very sophisticated! So I think gps, while be good, but shouldnt be relied on. BillK On Sun, 2009-01-25 at 20:10 -0600, The Digital Pioneer wrote: > Indeed, GPS fixes are tough to get, but they can be done. Just out of > curiosity, can the telco really do all that passive triangulation (or > more importantly, can I) they talk about in the movies? :P > > -- > > > Thanks, > > The Digital Pioneer -- William Kenworthy Home in Perth! ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
Indeed, GPS fixes are tough to get, but they can be done. Just out of curiosity, can the telco really do all that passive triangulation (or more importantly, can I) they talk about in the movies? :P -- Thanks, The Digital Pioneer ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
Problem with gps is that its slow to get a fix, sometimes very slow, and the phone may (probably?) be indoors or a car much of the time - so waiting for a fix is going to be a problem. Trigger with an "unknown" SIM card. Send a first "panic, I've been stolen!" sms message with as much detail as possible pulled from the SIM card, network settings (iwlist eth0 scan - and at your end try and locate on the wifi location database) - say forward their SIM phonebook to yourself (maybe one sms per contact to burn up their credit :) Then background and wait for a gps fix ... Meanwhile, start ringing their phone contacts ... starting with their mother :) BillK On Sun, 2009-01-25 at 19:51 -0600, The Digital Pioneer wrote: > This is an excellent idea. I've been wondering about this. If I had > GPRS, I would SSH in (possible? Getting the IP would be tricky) and > pull GPS coordinates. But I don't have GPRS. I think it would be good > to implement some kind of SIM-based security, along with a way to send > some kind of panic SMS. Both would activate some kind of daemon that > pulls coords from GPS whenever possible and sends them back to you. > Maybe have it call you at home and a TTS engine gives them to you if > you can't get SMS without your phone. Just some ideas. Would be > AWESOME to have a phone that works to return to its owner though. Lord > of the Rings like. :P > > As you maybe can tell, I've considered this a little just in case > someone steals my $400 baby. > > -- > > > Thanks, > > The Digital Pioneer > ___ > Openmoko community mailing list > community@lists.openmoko.org > http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community -- William Kenworthy Home in Perth! ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
This is an excellent idea. I've been wondering about this. If I had GPRS, I would SSH in (possible? Getting the IP would be tricky) and pull GPS coordinates. But I don't have GPRS. I think it would be good to implement some kind of SIM-based security, along with a way to send some kind of panic SMS. Both would activate some kind of daemon that pulls coords from GPS whenever possible and sends them back to you. Maybe have it call you at home and a TTS engine gives them to you if you can't get SMS without your phone. Just some ideas. Would be AWESOME to have a phone that works to return to its owner though. Lord of the Rings like. :P As you maybe can tell, I've considered this a little just in case someone steals my $400 baby. -- Thanks, The Digital Pioneer ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
2009/1/26 fredrik normann : > I'm a bit sad today, yesterday someone stole my phone. I helped a guy in the > street calling his girlfriend, (or that what he said) and when I got > distracted by a friend of him that asked for a cigarette he just ran > away I can only blame my self for being stupid This happend in > Montevideo Uruguay. if your telco is half-way decent, and you tell them it's been stolen, they should help. i know vodafone in nz will help track stolen phones. so long as the number was registered to you, they are in a position to assist. even if the sim has been changed, the imei will remain the same, and that will tie up to any activity with your number. give them a call, you never know. at least they will be able to prevent it connecting to their network, so no-one can use it. there may even be a nationwide scheme for preventing stolen phones being used on *any* network ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
This sounds like a modified version of sms-entry: http://www.opkg.org/package_92.html Sorry to here you've lost yours. signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
On Sun, Jan 25, 2009 at 9:53 PM, George Brooke wrote: > On Sunday 25 January 2009 23:47:07 fredrik normann wrote: > > This episode made me think of having some kind of tracking program. > Don't worry, just wait until he turns up here asking for help with the > phone > he just stole... lol The phone has very low value for someone that don't understands it... ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community
Re: Someone stole my Neo Freerunner... :(
On Sunday 25 January 2009 23:47:07 fredrik normann wrote: > This episode made me think of having some kind of tracking program. Don't worry, just wait until he turns up here asking for help with the phone he just stole... solar.george signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part. ___ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community