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#51 | |
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And before they do it they would have to be super careful to make sure it really was stolen and someone wasn't just screwing with a boyfriend that pissed you off |
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#52 |
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in the USA nothing is officially stolen until you go to the police station and fill out a police report, under penalty of perjury
lots of people seem to think they should just be able to go to an apple store and have their story believed on the spot |
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#55 |
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Man, when my BMW was stolen BMW didn't do anything. They didn't replace my car. What a crappy company.
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#56 |
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I was getting more at house raids for lost mobiles - surely you see the connection?
__________________
www.charlieegan3.com |
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#57 | |
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Eventually, through tracking the computer using the software, monitoring the thief's online activity and collecting pics of the thief in his house via the computer's camera, they were able to apprehend the guy & get the computer back. The story made the nightly news. It was a pretty wild ride to watch unfold. If anyone's interested, you can read this wild tale on his blog. I highly recommend it, it's quite a read. |
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#58 |
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Errr... correct me if I'm wrong... but the only ones who could possibly track a phone are, in fact, the mobile operators.
Any phone shall register on a network to get access to it, and triangulation is a well known procedure for location (specially in cases of emergencies when the person requesting help doesn't know the precise area or cannot even say it for any reason). So... honestly... Apple is not doing anything more than probably translating the user of a phone (via its Apple's account) to an IMEI that is then given to the Police who then turns to the mobile operator for the location of the phone... |
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#59 |
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Handing over the tracking information is the least Apple can do.
It's about time that they do something like this but how about expanding it across the country? They obviously have the technology to track stolen devices and they're finally taking a proactive role in retrieving a stolen device. Knowing how hot their products would be, Apple should have been doing this from the beginning. |
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#60 |
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Located and then some
In Oakland, CA you almost have to get murdered to have the police bother to respond. But in many jurisdictions they will not concern themselves with thefts amounting into the thousands of dollars.Maybe the NYPD is a model police department with the resources, one that really cares. Although one might suspect they are up to something else. Presumably in Syria one does not have the option of International Mobile Station Equipment Station, or the government that capability. But if it did, it would be worth the life of anyone presently opposing it to use their iPhone, even possibly no more than carry one unshielded. Perfect targeting device—towards your head with missiles, artillery and so forth. |
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#61 |
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Well the Dallas PD doesn't give a darn about stolen Apple devices. I'm glad to know someone does. My friend was eventually able to reclaim his retina MacBook Pro thanks to Apple's security features, but the PD refused to do anything about it.
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#62 | |
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__________________
27" iMac, 3.4 GHz i7; 15" MBP, 2.53 GHz Core 2 Duo; 13" MBA 1.7 GHz i5; iPad (3rd Gen), 16 GB; iPhone 4S; Hackintosh, 3.4 GHz i7 (2600k)
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#63 |
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Yes, you have to restore it to unlock it, but I'm just illustrating that when you sync with iTunes, it goes straight to Apple to track is all. Maybe Apple tracks this when you try to download or update apps or media and knows the IMEI number. If not, they could consider that.
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#64 |
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I'm still amazed people are stupid enough to steal an iPhone. Let alone taking pictures with it and posting it online
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#65 | |
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It's sad it gets to this point but I do find it encouraging that things are progressing, especially with the technology. The key is keeping up to date on the available info & technology. In the case of my own MBP theft, the police informed me thefts of this kind are going to worsen due to the state of the economy, which obviously makes sense. Hopefully this turn of events with Apple & the NYPD working in concert, will encourage more city's police departments to follow. |
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#67 |
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I have a dumb question, I recently got a new iMac and set up the iCloud tracking for it and my 3Gs, I tested the local my ... from my 3Gs to see the iMac and it located it but apparently didn't wake it up, does it do it in silence in the back ground without tuning the screen on?
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Late 2012 iMac, 27", 3.4Ghz i7, 32Gb RAM, 2Gb 680Mx, 1Tb Fusion... 3Gs iPhone. |
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I will try through home insurance. I'm just waiting for the police report.
__________________
Flickr Page |
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#69 | |
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All politics and business interests out of the way, a device with unique numbers, a SIM card, and a @#$%ing GPS should be very easy for the police to find or use in sting operations.
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His iPhone was also stolen with a tracking app enabled, so he knows where it's been and where it ended up. |
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#70 |
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This could have been resolved years ago.
It should have been made law that all reported mobiles be blocked internationally at the carrier level. |
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#71 |
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I am one of the 3,890 who had their iPhones stolen in NYC last year. It happened in February 2012, and I filed a police report but the police refused to do anything about it because I didn't actually see the person who took my phone (couldn't profile them). Although I know it was a theft because via find my iphone they took the phone with them to Brooklyn.
Anyway, is there anywhere I can report this again? Are they actually doing something now? I still have all of the serial info and stuff from my Apple receipt. It was an unlocked iPhone 4S 64gb that I paid over $900 for .
__________________
13" MacBook Pro (Early '11) i5, 8GB RAM, 500GB HD iPad 3rd gen 32GB WiFi Black T-Mobile iPhone 5 32GB Black
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#72 |
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#73 |
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#74 |
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I don't think Apple in general would want to assume that someone is turning in a stolen phone for a genius repair. Anyway, they are not the police - they are in the business of pleasing customers. They'd rather take a happy customer with a stolen one, and would happily take that customer who got their phone stolen and offer them to buy a new one.
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#75 | |
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__________________
Mac Pro | 27" iMac | 15" MacBook Pro with Retina display | iPhone 5 | iPad 3 | iPad mini
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In Oakland, CA you almost have to get murdered to have the police bother to respond. But in many jurisdictions they will not concern themselves with thefts amounting into the thousands of dollars.
27" iMac, 3.4 GHz i7;
Hackintosh, 3.4 GHz i7 (2600k)
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