NY thieves want iPhones, victims are fighting back
By Edith Honan
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Thieves are increasingly going after iPhones and other "smart phones" but victims now can fight back with technology.
One device allows a user to remotely activate a loud siren designed to rattle the thief. Another application, designed for iPhones, can reveal the phone's location.
Police statistics show petty crime is down in New York but anecdotal evidence and recent headlines about street muggings targeting costly and coveted devices like Apple's iPhone and T-Mobile's Sidekick have disturbed smart phone users concerned about protecting access to e-mail, passwords and other data.
"When we have seen spikes in thefts, a significant portion has to do with ... highly desirable products," said police spokesman Paul Browne. "In the last couple of years it's been iPods, Sidekicks, iPhones."
He said most of these muggings involve teenagers robbing other teenagers and take place on subways in the afternoon after schools get out.
New technology helps owners of expensive gadgets to get them back after they are lost or stolen. The Find My iPhone feature from Apple, which declined to comment for this story, enables users to determine the phone's location and erase the data on it, among other things.
A Chicago blogger who tried the feature after his iPhone disappeared tracked the phone's movements from a friend's computer. According to his post here, he got his phone back -- and a handshake from the surprised culprit.
"You're lucky you didn't get shot in the face," read one comment on the blog. Continued...
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