Surprise: Widely Owned Cell Phones Are Most Likely To Be Stolen
from the makes-sense dept
Keeping a list of the most stolen cars makes a lot of sense. It lets consumers know which ones they might want to avoid, or at least buy a LoJack for. But keeping a list of the most stolen phones doesn't do a whole lot of good. All phones are equally hard to steal, so you'd expect a tally of the phones most likely to be stolen to pretty much reflect their popularity. So it's not surprising that a new study from England says that Nokias are the most stolen phone, since, well, Nokia has the largest market share. The Motorola RAZR comes in high, but again, it's a popular phone. If people switched away from Nokias after this news, and instead started buying LGs, in mass, then in all likelihood, LGs would shoot to the top of the most-stolen charts, as well. The director of the study, eager to defend its relevence said, "The top 10 charts are a step in the right direction though, because they empower consumers with information, which should stimulate anti-crime design efforts by the mobile phone industry." Anti-crime designs like what? A phone that will deliver an electric shock if it doesn't recognize the pulse of the hand that holds it? A macephone? Actually, that might sell pretty well.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Don't Steal My Phone
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Re: Don't Steal My Phone
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pair it up
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Trunk Monkey
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Won't Steal Mine....
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If the phone model is very popular, then there are more of them out in the public (than other models), which means more likely when theives steal, they would encounter such phones to steal. Therefore, more of the stolen ones would be of that popular phone model.
obviously i generalized, but it's pretty logical to me.
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Re:
okay, i basically restated what the article said. no surprise~
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Why steal a cell phone?
I have not read the article, but I could write an article pointing out that the most popular cell phones are the most likely to be lost based on simple statistics.
The most frustrating thing with losing a cell phone is deciding what to replace it with, and then getting it all synced back up with the correct address book.
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ZAP!
that'd be brilliant, actually. except if you gave your friend or relative the phone to use, they'd get a bit of a jolt, which probably wouldn't bode too well for them. =
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then nobody would even bother to steal one
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Funny commercial but the actual advertisement for it sucked, I can't remember which company did the commercial.
I like the idea of a tazer phone, detects your life rythem and if the wrong person is scanned: Zap!
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Stay away from my Chocolate...
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Just a thought.
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Uhm, Joe...
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