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Cellphones Crime Government

California Bill Proposes Mandatory Kill-Switch On Phones and Tablets 341

alphadogg writes "Politicians and law enforcement officials in California will introduce a bill on Friday that requires all smartphones and tablet PCs sold in the state be equipped with a digital 'kill-switch' that would make the devices useless if stolen. The bill is a response to a rise in thefts of portable electronics devices, often at knife or gunpoint, being seen across the state. Already half of all robberies in San Francisco and 75 percent of those in Oakland involve a mobile device and the number is rising in Los Angeles, according to police figures. The trend is the same in major cities across the U.S. and the California bill, if it passes, could usher in kill-switch technology nationwide if phone makers choose not to produce custom devices for California. California Senate bill 962 says all smartphones and tablet PCs sold from Jan. 1, 2015, should have 'a technological solution that can render the essential features of the device inoperable when the device is not in possession of the rightful owner.'"
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California Bill Proposes Mandatory Kill-Switch On Phones and Tablets

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  • in other news (Score:4, Insightful)

    by rr_at_slashdot ( 1924306 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @09:42AM (#46185757)
    dice trying out kill-switch on /. Boycott!
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by TWiTfan ( 2887093 )

      You know, it's amazing that they have time to downmod all these beta threads, while frantically listening to us (the audience) and working to implement our valued suggestions all at the same time. Dice employees are such incredible multi-taskers.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by DickBreath ( 207180 )
        Calling us the Audience is like the Bee Keeper calling the Bees the audience.

        Bees make honey. You can set up bee boxes and have bees live in the boxes and make honey that you can harvest. But the bees are free to leave at any time. The only reason the bees stay is because the boxes are less trouble than building a beehive. Try making the bee box unusable and the bees will just go build a beehive elsewhere. Don't believe it? They've been building beehives for a lot longer (*cough* Usenet *cough*) than bee
    • by edibobb ( 113989 )
      No kidding! I tried to upvote (I have moderator points), but nothing happened. I went from Firefox to a virgin copy of Chrome, and nothing happened again. Maybe now Dice "invisibly" blocks miscreants like Reddit does.
  • by Doug Otto ( 2821601 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @09:44AM (#46185781)
    Already half of all robberies in San Francisco and 75 percent of those in Oakland involve a mobile device and the number is rising in Los Angeles, according to police figures.

    Really, what we need, is a kill switch for Oakland, San Francisco and LA.
    • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @09:58AM (#46185947) Journal

      Already half of all robberies in San Francisco and 75 percent of those in Oakland involve a mobile device and the number is rising in Los Angeles, according to police figures. Really, what we need, is a kill switch for Oakland, San Francisco and LA.

      We also need some insight into whether those robberies were for the mobile device, or whether they were somebody pulling a knife and saying 'gimme your shit', combined with the fact that cellphones are at least as common as wallets at this point.

      • by gnick ( 1211984 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @10:12AM (#46186057) Homepage

        I'd suspect the latter. And instead of a kill switch, wouldn't a switch forcibly enabling GPS tracking be more effective? Of course, misuse could be an issue.

        • I'd suspect the latter. And instead of a kill switch, wouldn't a switch forcibly enabling GPS tracking be more effective? Of course, misuse could be an issue.

          I'm pretty sure they can do that now. The know exactly what cell tower I am hitting and they can even triangulate my location from multiple towers. It would seem that if your device were reported stolen to the cell company, they block the ESN from being used. Sure, they would have your phone, but other than the data that is on it, what could they get. And as for the data, if that is their goal, they will get it before you even have time to alert the phone company to kill the device.

        • by AlphaWolf_HK ( 692722 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @01:14PM (#46187937)

          Trouble is, stolen phones are being exported. Not a whole lot of use being able to forcibly track your phone when it now resides in China (literally, that's where they often go) especially considering that China doesn't extradite their own citizens or particularly even gives a shit when one of them breaks another country's laws.

      • by Beorytis ( 1014777 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @10:16AM (#46186093)

        ...cellphones are at least as common as wallets at this point.

        For comparison, we should see the statistic for how many robberies involved a wallet, and then perhaps some legislation to require mandatory kill switches on our money.

        • by mbone ( 558574 )

          For comparison, we should see the statistic for how many robberies involved a wallet, and then perhaps some legislation to require mandatory kill switches on our money.

          Oh, they would love to do that too, by getting rid of cash.

        • The issue is obviously a dead letter, since any expensive structural change would probably involve moving away from little paper rectangles with dead guys printed on them; but for any serialized currency, it wouldn't be rocket surgery to add a little OCR to certain choke-points in the system to increase the difficulty of handling bills with an other-than-honorable chain of custody. Not much you could do about less official channels; but just dumping them in the ATM could get hazardous.
      • by mbone ( 558574 )

        Yes, "involve" is a favorite police weasel word, as it means more or less whatever they want it to mean.

      • by dkman ( 863999 )
        I agree, taking the phone was just as likely to:
        • * stop the victim from calling the cops right away
        • * stop the victim from taking photos of the perp as they run away

        Part of it might be resale value, but I kind of think the robber understands those 2 points as well.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 07, 2014 @09:46AM (#46185807)

    It will be used against you. Next "bigger" protest they will kill switch the entire area. Record away ...

    • by ConceptJunkie ( 24823 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @10:44AM (#46186387) Homepage Journal

      What people fail to consider is what happens when any particular bit of power given to the government is misused, because it _will_ be misused. There are plenty of things I think it would be great for the government to be able to do, but would never support it because it could be abused. That's why we need as little government as we can get away with and still maintain order.

    • by rvw ( 755107 )

      It will be used against you. Next "bigger" protest they will kill switch the entire area. Record away ...

      I wonder if it will be possible to kill the kill switch somehow. Will this be hardware enabled, or a software setting?

  • by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @09:47AM (#46185819) Homepage

    If you start making phones with kill switches, that is going to be a very attractive target for hackers.

    Imagine if you could wholesale destroy thousands of phones in one go?

    And since legislators only barely understand their intended outcomes, and not the unintended consequences, they won't be mandating any proper security with this -- and it will be badly implemented.

    But, really, what black hat isn't going to be giddy with glee at the prospect of wiping out a whole bunch of phones in an area?

    Yeah, yeah, offtopic because I didn't say 'fuck beta' ... I'm just tired of the nerd rage, it gets old after a while.

    • by AJH16 ( 940784 )

      I have less of a problem if they make it a kill switch that can be cryptographically turned off by the manufacturer after verifying the purchaser or even with some kind of a special key that you get with the purchase and keep at home. It should also be something that can be turned off by the end user.

      If you can ensure that it can be reverted securely when triggered and can be prevented from triggering by the legit user (possibly using the same mechanism as unlocking a locked device) then I don't see a prob

      • by Shoten ( 260439 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @10:10AM (#46186025)

        I have less of a problem if they make it a kill switch that can be cryptographically turned off by the manufacturer after verifying the purchaser or even with some kind of a special key that you get with the purchase and keep at home. It should also be something that can be turned off by the end user.

        If you can ensure that it can be reverted securely when triggered and can be prevented from triggering by the legit user (possibly using the same mechanism as unlocking a locked device) then I don't see a problem with it, but without those two caveats, there are so, so many thing that could go wrong.

        I love this..."crypto," the magic "c" word that makes everything secure just by talking about it. In reality, it's not quite that simple. Authentication in Windows, for example, works like what you just described...and yet look at the flaws in NTLM and NTLMv2 authentication that turned up. That covers over a decade of time, before MS adopted Kerberos. Then, to that, add all the vulnerabilities in the software that governs authentication...I've lost track of how many times LSASS [wikipedia.org] has been patched.

        And yes, I hear it now...the retort: "But that's Microsoft! They suck at security!" Maybe, maybe not, but the fact that they also dominate the desktop space should be a warning that you have to consider: functionality to be placed in ubiquitous consumer devices may not have the world's best security controlling them. And that is just a simple empirical fact as demonstrated by the recent past and current reality.

        • You're talking about system authentication, which uses symmetric crypto. The GP was talking about asymmetric / a.k.a. public key crypto, which is an entirely different beast. If you could break it, your targets would be much more valuable than mere cell phones.

        • by AJH16 ( 940784 ) <aj@ajhendersOPENBSDon.com minus bsd> on Friday February 07, 2014 @01:17PM (#46187983) Homepage

          You are correct that cryptography is not a cure-all to all problems, however, your post goes irrevocably wrong immediately after that. HSM and TPM chips are quite secure and well established. The example problems you suggest are in no way relevant to the conversation at hand since they deal with an entirely different use case of security. As dmbasso was kind enough to point out, I am referring to the use of asymmetric cryptography to allow secure validation of a private key being held remotely. Such cryptography is used all the time (any time you use an HTTPS page) to prove the exact same thing.

          The device merely has to hold the a public key for which the legitimate owner (or the vendor) has the private key. If the device is stolen and locked, it is trivial for an HSM to prevent unlock without the private key. It may be possible to circumvent the kill switch by yanking the HSM, but such an operation would likely exceed the black market cost of the majority of phones as it involves painstaking processes such as removing the silicon one layer at a time with a very carefully applied acid bath, and even then, the write once public key address space would be just as secure as any write once kill switch flag that could be implemented.

          To prevent re-activation of the kill switch itself (rather than the recovery mechanism) the switch could be tied in hardware to a similar challenge response against a private key held in the device's HSM. To "kill" the device, this private key would be wiped, preventing the device from starting. To re-initialize it, the private device key would be restored by looking for a key signed by the owner's private key.

          This is a simple to implement and highly secure system that would be cost prohibitive to work around and also could use available, near off the shelf components to implement.

      • by gmuslera ( 3436 )
        You can always hack, or social engineer, or worker there that abuses or sell that information, in the layer that actually does the killing. And the same happen with the layers above (inparticular the rogue worker part could be a rogue CEO or the government itself). Would you be actually buying something if someone else keeps having the power of kill it at will?
    • by iguana ( 8083 ) * <davep@extendsy[ ]om ['s.c' in gap]> on Friday February 07, 2014 @09:52AM (#46185875) Homepage Journal

      Better yet, imagine how useful a phone kill switch would be during widespread citizen protests?

      "For public safety, we have to shut off everyone's phone. And because terrorism."

      • by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @10:02AM (#46185975) Homepage

        *sigh* Yeah, you're probably right.

        This will be both misused by malicious entities, and misused by the malicious entities we call governments.

        It seems like every time people try to legislate solutions to these kinds of problems they just create more problems due to their stunning lack of understanding of the technology.

      • > Better yet, imagine how useful a phone kill switch would be during widespread citizen protests?
        > "For public safety, we have to shut off everyone's phone. And because terrorism."

        You forgot to Think of the Children!
      • Better yet, imagine how useful a phone kill switch would be during widespread citizen protests?

        "For public safety, we have to shut off everyone's phone. And because terrorism."

        Actually, they don't need a kill switch for the phones to do this--there are a lot fewer devices to shut off if you simply shutdown the cell-towers in the area to cutoff communication.

        • Actually, they don't need a kill switch for the phones to do this--there are a lot fewer devices to shut off if you simply shutdown the cell-towers in the area to cutoff communication.

          But those devices don't render any video recordings you may have made inaccessible.

      • People who rely on spy-phones for organizing protests have it coming anyway.
    • Crackers are just the beginning of the danger. Imagine a government with the power to shut off any phone (any portable data transfer device?) at any time using the T word as an excuse and not having to even justify it for several months. The laws that allow the latter are already in place, enacted, and only awaiting the ability.

      This is one of the most dangerous laws imaginable.
    • by wvmarle ( 1070040 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @10:08AM (#46186015)

      It sounds very much like some kind of DRM to me.

      It's a digital lock - which can be activated remotely, so certainly can be activated (and deactivated) locally. It may be hard to unlock, but it will be possible.

      Like DRM, it'll inconvenience the casual offender, who has limited technical ability. And sooner or later people will get accidentally locked out of their genuinely owned devices. Indeed maybe due to a ransomware type malware, maybe due to a simple error at the manufacturer's server, whatever. It can happen, so it will happen.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

      Many phones already have this capability. Google and Apple can be remotely delete apps from user's phones, and many carriers can lock out SIM cards. We know Apple can perform remote wipes too, as a few people have already fallen victim to hackers doing just that after gaining access to their accounts.

      Most PCs have a similar vulnerability. If an app gains root it could set a random ATA password for hard drive, making the machine unbootable and unrecoverable even by trying to do a full format. You would need

    • by mlts ( 1038732 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @10:27AM (#46186189)

      Even if a phone can be killed, it likely won't drop crime that much. Unlike car radios which were pretty much made useless by the fact that OEMs have decent audio from the factory, smartphones will still make money when parted out. In fact, if an iPhone is just stripped and just the screen sold, that is at least a couple C-notes right there, which is good money.

      An iPad or tablet is even more cash for parts.

      So, with this in mind, yes, killing the device might stop it from being sent to Mexico and used there, but for the most past, IMEI blacklists have similar functionality.

      To boot, we already have that functionality in place. Any device running iOS 7.x will require the user's AppleID and password before it will activate, so stealing an iPhone in order to resell the unit is an exercise in futility.

      PS: Insert beta rant here.

      • an iPhone is just stripped and just the screen sold, that is at least a couple C-notes right there

        What? You can get good ones with a warranty from Amazon for 60-90 USD.

        Not to say that people won't steal them to part them out but I think you need to go and see what the parts are really worth. Samsung Galaxy screens are worth a bit more but they're OEM whereas the Apple replacements seem to be knock offs. Either way, you're still getting a warranty out of either purchase but you still need to do the job yo
    • Your concerns about hackers can be addressed by using proper security.

      Make the kill switch feature only work by visiting a secret URL. Remember, it is secret, therefore totally secure.

      The tail end of the URL is the phone number digits. But not in plaintext -- those digits would be protected by ROT13 applied an ODD number of times to ensure security.
    • The bill doesn't specify the technology (according to TFA). I would assume this would be implemented using the "push" mechanism (which is actually "pull", in reality). At the same time it checks for alerts, the device would check for the kill "signal". This mechanism would be controlled by the carrier or OS provider, and shouldn't be vulnerable in this way.

      Should mention that I'm against it, though!

  • IMEI blocking (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 07, 2014 @09:49AM (#46185839)

    Isn't this what IMEI blocking is supposed to do?

    • Not all tablets have IMEIs. Other than that, it's a pretty good solution. The one problem with IMEI blocking is that you can't enforce a worldwide block, so devices can still be shipped out of the country. Also, many of the devices are still useful even without cellular service. Turn off the cellular radio, and you still can use wifi connectivity. You can still listen to music, play your apps, and do a lot of other fun things with it.
  • I'm sorry. A remote kill-switch is unacceptable. The big time thieves already put your cellphone in a Faraday cage when they swipe it. The real purpose of this device remote kill switch is to allow a more target approach to the Internet kill-switch -- Which as we've recently seen is what oppressive governments do to silence public opposition. Keep in mind that the USA has a long history of silencing public activism, [wikipedia.org] and they are actively planning to ensure their capability to silence activists. [theguardian.com]

    It's quite telling indeed that this would be made mandatory, and not present at the user's option. Why not let the market decide whether this feature is wanted? This mandatory oppressive non-feature creep is anti-capitalism, anti-freedom, and anti-American.

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )

      The big time thieves already put your cellphone in a Faraday cage when they swipe it.

      This can be mitigated by tying the kill request to the physical device, and not just the sim card it contains, and also a special code that can be set by the user of the device, and which will not be reset just by changing the sim card. A person who is legitimately selling their device would either have to explicitly clear that code from the device or reset it to a default state before transferring it, or tell the person t

      • A person who is legitimately selling their device would either have to explicitly clear that code from the device or reset it to a default state before transferring it

        So the mugger just beats them with a $5 wrench until they reset it.

        Next!

  • Yeah, No. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @09:52AM (#46185871) Journal
    This would be a disaster. Even if the objective is noble, there's an ugly architectural fact: as with any other DRM scheme, you can't have effective control unless the 'owner' of the device is no longer the most privileged user of the device. Whether you bake it into the OS, some sort of hypervisor, the firmware, or whatever, there has to be an agent one level higher to enforce restrictions on the user.

    The only exception (in this bill's case, not in that of DRM generally) would be if the control mechanism were cryptographically keyfilled by the user, leaving them as the root of control but still providing for strong lockout of third parties. I'm just guessing that that concept won't be a big hit in consumer electronics, though...

    In practice, this would make it illegal to sell a tablet or smartphone that isn't tivoized and locked down, since anything that lets you reflash the firmware would be overwhelmingly likely to allow a modestly competent attacker to neutralize a killswitch. Fan-fucking-tastic.
    • You can nuke your iThingy remotely if you've enabled that.

      • And iDevices are pretty much the cool, shiny, face of the contemporary DRM lockdown appliance. Exactly the state of computation that is bad enough without legal mandate.
    • by mark-t ( 151149 )
      What about a user-configurable password that isn't reset simply by changing the sim card, and which requires entry into the device to either change or reset to a default state? If a device receives a kill switch and it is not for the code that is currently set for the device it is ignored. A thief wouldn't know what the code for a physical device is, and so would be unable to change it, and thus not able to prevent it from receiving a kill signal the next time the device is connected to a network. This
  • by ExXter ( 1361251 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @09:53AM (#46185883)
    This perfectly covers the need of police and secret agencies for a simple "switch off method" for mobil phones and devices in particular areas of interest in which officials, independant of reason, want to shut down public spread of information at all cost. Censorship at its best, Orwell would have jumped of joy ^^.

    The device list for such a maneuver is easily obtained through the telecommunication companies which already give free acess to NSA & Co.

    Spawning from riots which have to be covered up.
    To civilian killings + shut down of areas.
    Etcetc ... you can all count. If you want information to leave an area in which you are active, just switch off any device thats not yours. (Good I still can make photos with my analog camera).

    The idea is good but the use for others is terrifying.
  • by Akratist ( 1080775 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @09:56AM (#46185935)
    Someone tries to rob or kill you for your phone, you switch from "Safe" to "Fire."
    • Someone tries to rob or kill you for your phone, you switch from "Safe" to "Fire."

      Yeah, not in California. Concealed carry is only for the rich and connected here. They're quickly stripping away what means we have left to defend ourselves. Check out the microstamping bullshit they've pushed through as law. Smith & Wesson and Ruger both recently took their balls and went home because of it...

  • Oh gee, our enemies are going to love this, the ability to nuke all the cells phones in the US at one shot. How much do you think a cracker could sell this exploit for?

    Better solution: create a database of stolen IMEI numbers. In that way it can be reversed if/when the eventual screwup occurs.

  • People who have their cell phones stolen were just asking for it. They shouldn't be flashing their bling around like some technoslut. It's not the thieves fault. They can't help themselves.

  • Missing Stats (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Bob9113 ( 14996 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @10:07AM (#46186003) Homepage

    Already half of all robberies in San Francisco and 75 percent of those in Oakland involve a mobile device and the number is rising in Los Angeles, according to police figures.

    Some missing stats here: How many robberies is that, how many were there five years ago, and what percentage of robberies involved a wallet? Is this a sign of increasing crime due to cell phones, or are cell phones just a thing of value that most people carry that is taken along with the victim's wallet and watch? What percentage of these crimes will be prevented if a kill switch is implemented?

    Without that information, this is just another case of, "Bad things happen, therefore we need more laws!" Effective laws do an excellent job of reducing crime. Crime stats in the US have been on an impressive and near continual downward trend, and that is an excellent thing to achieve. Ineffectual laws do not solve problems, however, and they weaken the system.

    Also: Fuck beta. I am not the audience, I am one of the authors of this site. I am Slashdot. This is a debate community. I will leave if it becomes some bullshit IT News 'zine. And I don't think Dice has the chops to beat the existing competitors in that space.

    • Is there still anything of value in a wallet? I'd guess the amount of cash went down with everything going credit card, nfc and all that stuff. Likewise: who still wears an expensive watch?

      • Who still wears a watch at all? I see almost no one with them anymore - at least not on a regular basis. I actually have on (that I think I paid $10 for) whose only purpose is to go with me on trips where I know my cellphone battery won't last the day (ie, on long fishing trips and such). Gets used maybe 4-5 times per year.

        • I wear a watch. Primarily because if I want to know the time, It takes all of half a second to look at my wrist. Plus, the mechanics are nice
          Carrying around a phone for time and pulling it out of my pocket makes me feel like some 1880s train conductor consulting his pocketwatch.

    • Some missing stats here: How many robberies is that, how many were there five years ago, and what percentage of robberies involved a wallet? Is this a sign of increasing crime due to cell phones, or are cell phones just a thing of value that most people carry that is taken along with the victim's wallet and watch?

      It probably has a lot less to do with cell phones being valuable and more with not wanting to get caught. If I were a mugger, I'd take my victim's cell phone regardless of whether it was a smart phone or $10 Tracfone. You don't want your victims calling the cops right after you flee.

  • Since this bill would make Find My iPhone's [apple.com] "Activation Lock", which I would bet money is patented, a requirement for Android and Windows devices.

    • Ah, but all of a sudden Apple's Activation Lock patent becomes a Standards Essential patent. And we all know how much Apple thinks Standards Essential patents are worth. Zip. Zilch. Squat. Not even worth negotiating over at any price.
  • A "kill switch" will just brick devices the first time they connect to the network in California or a network that transmits "kill switch" orders outside of California. I wouldn't expect it to work if the thief dropped the phone in a metal-lined bag until it was safely outside of the country.

    Blacklisting the ESN is just as effective and doesn't require special phones.

    Besides, if the phones are being bagged and stripped for parts in a shielded room, neither blacklisting nor a kill switch will do much good.

  • Criminals have to eat too.
    • At the risk and possible personal embarrassment of being called a shameful name like Republican, I'll just say this. But I'll only apply it to criminals.

      2 Thessalonians 3:10 [biblegateway.com]

      I would not apply it to people who don't work through no fault of their own.
  • "...can render the essential features of the device inoperable when the device is not in possession of the rightful owner."?

    Well the rightful owners of our phones are technically still Samsung / Apple / LG /

    Does that mean they can arbitrarily decide which phones to disable remotely whenever they'd like?
    • > Well the rightful owners of our phones are technically still Samsung / Apple / LG /
      > Does that mean they can arbitrarily decide which phones to disable remotely whenever they'd like?

      Yes it means that. Technically. Not necessarily legally. You could also include which PC's that Microsoft could remotely disable whenever they like.
  • by kav2k ( 1545689 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @10:24AM (#46186163)

    Suppose this is implemented. Then imagine a new escalation in the patent wars: say, a phone model is found infringing, and judge mandates not only to stop sales, but to remotely destroy all devices sold in the US.

  • It already exists (Score:4, Interesting)

    by dirk ( 87083 ) <dirk@one.net> on Friday February 07, 2014 @10:25AM (#46186169) Homepage

    This already exists and the rest of the world uses it. It's called the IMEI number. Simply report the phone stolen and the carriers can kill the IMEI and put it on a list so that it can't work on any of their networks. Yes, thieves could still use the phone offline, but it puts a HUGE dent into reasons for stealing a phone. But carriers continue to fight against this, IMO, because stolen phones means they get to sell the customer another phone (and at non-subsidized prices). We don't need a new kill switch for the phones, we just need to legislate that the cell companies uses what is at their disposal.

  • Stolen phones cannot be used withouy the acquiesence of phone companies in providing service to the phones and their new "owners".

    So fine and jail phone CEOs for designing a business model that incorporates, deliberately, the laundering of stolen property.

  • How are they going to kill it if the device is off or only does wifi? I suppose it is less likely that people will run around town with a wifi only device.
    Also, why not let the market decided? The manufacturer can make it an optional feature and if the user wants it, they can pay for it. No need for even more legislation, which attempts to control what some manufacturer in China builds.
  • What's to stop the thieves from just killing the owner outright so it can't be reported before the SIM is changed?

  • Simple technical solution implemented in my country without insecure remote kill switch: force telephony providers to share stolen phone IMEI numbers, and block those phones on their networks. Changing IMEI number is possible, but it is beyond most thiefs knowledge, and if they know how to change it for a particular phone model, they will now how to remove the killed flag on the phone

  • The problem here is not the phones. Are they really playing the scantily clad rape victim game with phones?

    The problem is that the People's Republic of California has already written the laws which encourage this. The law-abiding citizens have no way to protect themselves against the armed thugs who unsurprisingly don't care about laws about force and weapons.

    Now they are trying to make rape less likely by ordering the wearing of chastity belts. Next will it be burkas? Nobody can have a hot new phone becaus

  • Because they didn't learn from that....

  • This story was ran a couple of months back.

    And it was already shown/proven that the ability to remote kill stolen phones is already possible. All current new phones have this ability. Its the CARRIERS that do not want to enable it. They make money off you buying a new phone and off selling service to whomever stole your phone.

    The Carriers are the only ones fighting against this.
  • The NSA, CIA, FBI, OSBI, and Mayes County Sheriff's department have agreed not to turn off cell phones of undesirables.
  • What we really need is a kill-switch for a certain Slashy website that has a new version between alpha and gamma coming out this month.

    I for one, DON'T welcome our new robotic post-deleting censorship-embracing overlords!

    See you all after the boycott. Actually, I probably won't. Auto-deleting posts is pretty much the last straw for me here.

  • I think that whatever kill switch mechanisms they put in place will be compromised to let attackers remotely trigger them to brick phones at a distance in a week and a half.

    On the down side, script kiddies able to permanently disable phones from dozens or hundreds of feet away is a scary thought.

    On the up side, interrupting people who are paying more attention to their phone conversation with their friends than to controlling the several ton hunk of metal and plastic they're driving at 60/80/90+ miles per h

  • by AnalogDiehard ( 199128 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @11:44AM (#46187031)
    This bill proposes to put the kill switch under the control of law enforcement officials. That's asking for abuse from an oppressive government. Look how Obama has used IRS, ATF, OSHA, and other agencies as political weapons to intimidate political enemies.

    If the government were REALLY concerned for the public good, they would put the kill switch under the control of the CONSUMER. We already have it for credit cards - we call up a phone number, report it stolen, and wala credit card becomes an instant brick. There is no reason this couldn't be done for mobile devices.
    • and wala

      Voila.

      Never try to write a word you've only heard spoken - you'll look like an idiot if you guess wrong in a spectacular way.

  • by kaatochacha ( 651922 ) on Friday February 07, 2014 @11:55AM (#46187133)

    But it's obligatory:
    "What could possibly go wrong with this?"

  • Wow, a lot of these posts imply that 'a technological solution that can render the essential features of the device inoperable when the device is not in possession of the rightful owner' must be a kill switch.

    A decent technological solution might be to sense some unique component of the rightful owner's smell and not work if that isn't present.

  • If you want to solve this problem you might start with educating those who elect to move about care free in public advertising their expensive wares everywhere they go.

  • "This device will self destruct in 10 seconds..."

    I would suggest using thermite.

  • And fuck beta

"I got everybody to pay up front...then I blew up their planet." "Now why didn't I think of that?" -- Post Bros. Comics

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