Path: ...!weretis.net!feeder8.news.weretis.net!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: Frank Slootweg Newsgroups: uk.telecom.mobile,comp.mobile.android Subject: Re: "'Scammers stole =?ISO-8859-1?Q?=A340k?= after EDF gave out my number" Date: 5 Mar 2025 13:25:23 GMT Organization: NOYB Lines: 30 Message-ID: References: X-Trace: individual.net 0t4/ICk/edG2rYlJ9FYcrQNsQQp1m8/FT0ha4jDYBqRQaop2Fk X-Orig-Path: not-for-mail Cancel-Lock: sha1:Ivze5HTJXlaXGNigsrbL2wHPUzw= sha256:7jqLcriUL7sZc0IpY2UvSJLDni/NIaBwPx8UtxhXaDE= User-Agent: tin/1.6.2-20030910 ("Pabbay") (UNIX) (CYGWIN_NT-10.0-WOW/2.8.0(0.309/5/3) (i686)) Hamster/2.0.2.2 Bytes: 2477 Newyana2 wrote: > On 3/4/2025 4:09 PM, Chris wrote: > > > > > If someone has your emails and your mobile phone number you are royally > > screwed. Yes, even you. > > I'm repeatedly struck by how much cellphone addicts can't > imagine any other way to live. My cellphone has no address book, > no apps to speak of, no passwords. I keep it in case I need to > make a phone call away from home. If someone steals it then > I'd just buy another $40 TracFone amnd another $20 card to > get me 3 months usage. No big loss. You're apparently assuming that if a smartphone gets stolen, the thief has access to the apps, data, etc. on the phone. Earth to Newyana2: (S)He hasn't! At least not if the user has something which remotely resembles a functioning brain. Nowadays, there's even protection for the scenario when the thief grabs the unlocked phone from your hands (Theft Protection Lock). Once locked, the thief can not do anything with the phone, except a hard reset (which wipes everything) and sell the phone. The latter is why (s)he stole it in the first place, not for your data. Again: It's not a problem that you don't use this stuff and - apparently - don't want to know/learn how it works. It's *not* OK to spread FUD, urban legends, fear mongering, innuendo, etc., etc. about something you don't even use and clearly do not understand.