Smartphones Driving Violent Crime Across US 204
alphadogg writes "Incidents of cellphone theft have been rising for several years and are fast becoming an epidemic. IDG News Service collected data on serious crimes in San Francisco from November to April and recorded 579 thefts of cellphones or tablets, accounting for 41 percent of all serious crime. In just over half the incidents, victims were punched, kicked or otherwise physically intimidated for their phones, and in a quarter of robberies, users were threatened with guns or knives. This isn't just happening in tech-loving San Francisco, either. The picture is similar across the United States. A big reason for such thefts, until recently, is that there had been little to stop someone using a stolen cellphone. Reacting to pressure from law enforcement and regulators, the U.S.'s largest cellphone carriers agreed early last year to establish a database of stolen cellphones."
Ban Smartphones (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ban Smartphones (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ban Smartphones (Score:4, Funny)
When smartphones are outlawed, only outlaws will have smartphones!
Re:Ban Smartphones (Score:5, Funny)
What about our right to bear ARMs?
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What about our right to bear ARMs?
Unfortunately, on the street bear ARMs lead to bear hugs from shady people now.
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Take the pledge - Just Say No to Smartphones!
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. . . oh, those crazy kids will just start 3D printing their own . . .
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If we don't ban them now eventually we'll have Google Cars Driving Violent Crime Across US
IMEI (Score:1)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IMEI
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CDMA phones have a serial number.
Typical criminal scum... (Score:2)
Steeling the most shiny, but least valuable shit because they just don't understand. They lack knowledge. And if they had it they wouldn't need to resort to steeling it.
I'm not saying this is true in every case, but probably in greater then 70% of them.
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I'm talking about their intrinsic value. And once you've stolen one it still needs to be wiped, reconfigured, whatever. Right now it's pretty easy, but its going to increasingly become cost in-efficient. And any good phone I know bricks itself from a server command. Blackberries.
My 10 year old phone still works fine for SMS, email, browsing the web. The latest shiny shit is just shiny shit. That phone may be 100$ on the new market but its going to be like 40$ if that on the black market.
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iphones can be worth 100-200(newest) just in parts besides the motherboard(that is, even if it's wiped and unusable condition).
they're not stealing the phones which are 100 bucks new. they're stealing the phones which are 600-700 bucks new(or phones which they think might be that).
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Read an article recently about this. Seems that in one case, a couple thugs held up some woman for her iPhone, then when they had it in hand, looked closely, realized it wasn't the latest iPhone, and gave it back to her....
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Well, if you're going to do it, be polite.
They could have ran off with it anyway, or injured her for the trouble.
Theives are dumb asses. (Score:2)
The thief should just sign up a 2 year contract, then not pay for it.
Maybe just report your phone was stolen by Chechen rebels terrorists, DHS will find it in 5mins.
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Oh, now *there's* some IRONy for ya'! :P
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Yes, then they can chome plate them so they can steel chrome google smartphones.
English is stupid. We need to update the language so all meanings and words are symbolic and unique and new configurations are easy to understand and do not replicate previous words without a great deal of memorization.
Anyway, stealing smart phones are not going to give you upwards mobility even in the criminal career path. I bet they are most likely stuck doing that or thats not the only thing they steal. Anyway this just sound
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Maybe you should dedicate some of your precious time to properly utilizing the language(s) you use.
It's your primary interface when dealing with other humans, and like it or not, you WILL be judged by your ability to use it. You will do well to invest in it, regardless of your distaste for the rules.
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I agree, and I make more mistakes then I would like.
But I tend to enjoy being a smart (dumb) ass on occasion. =)
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I guess you go to bars and tell all drunk people to speak correctly.
Good luck
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Yea, because English should look like Chinese [wikipedia.org]. Sounds fun!
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Nor do I. I am just trying to point out its the the best way to try and survive even though people might convince themselves it is.
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*is not
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Lets assume your rent is 300$, and you work enough to earn that rent. Then buy some beer and go out to the movies, and maybe take a girl out, so you work 6 days that month and earn 600$. You are still subsisting.
You then don't factor in the cost when someone either resists and completely destroys you for voilating their person. Or you get caught and end up getting assraped. Sure in some jurisdictions you may spend a night in prison, get a quick trial the next morning and end up out on probation where you ca
YOU are missing the big picture (Score:3, Insightful)
The modern world is complicated. You don't notice just how complicated it is because your brain is well-adapted to it. You are plenty intelligent enough to manage the level of complexity necessary for a prosperous middle-class life, so much so that you don't even realize just how much stuff you have to know and figure out in order to live well. You are beyond this level of complexity, and could probably handle even more.
However, there is a large segment of the population that are not so intelligent, and
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A sad analysis. But I would have to generally agree that this is the way things seem to be moving.
There are (grammar?) some less complicated places to live on earth. But they are either not easy or (politically?) unpleasant. Siberia being a hard, but perhaps simpler place to live as an example.
But you cannot de-urbanize the densely populated cities of the United States over night. Also people who don't fit into a metropolitan life style can't migrate away easily or believe it is beneath them even.
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thats what wars are for..... (Score:2)
Those mad undesirables can go to battle, and become bullet catchers.
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No, but enjoy living in a prison system instead of creating a society that doesn't revolve around petty bullying. And haves vs have nots. Your logic is not wrong. But I disagree with your principles.
Re:Typical criminal scum... (Score:4, Informative)
I witnessed one iPhone theft, a snatch and run from a bus. The owner set off after the thief but quickly returned to ask the bus driver (me!) to call the cops as the thief had a machete, and the phone owner very sensibly valued his skin more than the phone.
However, instead of just walking into the night before Security and the cops arrived, the thief went to the nearby train station. The security guards there, having been warned by my radio call, promptly apprehended the idiot and he's now doing time for assault with a deadly weapon. Oh, and for theft of an iPhone...
Think about the value of the stuff you carry around with you. If you're a man, maybe a nice watch, maybe some cash in your wallet (but less and less these days) and... your expensive smartphone. A woman might add some jewellery to that list, but probably not much day to day. So what else is a thief going to steal? Especially because there's less point in breaking and entering these days, since the old standbys of VCRs or DVD players are now worth almost nothing, and big-screen TVs are hernia producers!
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And this is why I have a fifty dollar smartphone. I replaced the back and the screen protector and it's as good as new... new in 2011, that is. But since it has a pretty great GPU and a decent developer community it's still a cool phone. You don't have to have a crap phone to have a cheap phone. Of course, we can't all do this, because of all the people who keep all their old phones. Set those phones free! The less fortunate would like smartphones, too. If you sit on them you'll just regret it later, and me
Stupid situation (Score:5, Insightful)
Such a stupid situation that could be solved easily.
If the carriers had a service for the owner to remotely brick and unbrick the phone as well as transfer ownership (with the ability to brick) to another person this would be a non-issue.
It's a service that makes owning the phone more valuable to the end-user; yet, it's an externality to the phone companies. Rather than provide the best possible product and services, they do the barest minimum and reap unjustly high profits. They can do this because they operate out of the normal reach of capitalism - the state-sponsored monopoly. With a stranglehold on public property and the blessings of their government lawmakers, they can do pretty-much whatever they want. Capitalism has failed, therefore we need more government regulation.
That should greatly shorten this discussion. Did I miss any memes?
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At the very least when I report that my phone was stolen, then the uniq id in the phone could be traced so if anyone tried to activate it MY phone could be recovered.
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That should greatly shorten this discussion. Did I miss any memes?
Only if you want to count the Drug War, which drives up drug prices and prevents treatment, leaving addicts to turn to petty crime. I think the last estimate was in the low 80% range of home burglaries being drug-addict related. Talk about externalities - all the people who are being robbed and burglarized are paying to this government program.
Capitalism has failed, therefore we need more government regulation.
Oh, right, the goal is more go
Re:Stupid situation (Score:5, Informative)
If the carriers had a service for the owner to remotely brick and unbrick the phone as well as transfer ownership (with the ability to brick) to another person this would be a non-issue.
Brick or brick not. There is no unbrick.
--
I live in an unbrick house.
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Brick or brick not. There is no unbrick.
Recoverable with JTAG is considered by most to be bricked. But there's no remote unbrick. There is only remote lock and unlock, and on some devices that requires testpoint access.
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Recoverable with JTAG is considered by most to be bricked.
But they're wrong.
It is an especially relevant distinction in this case, where a thief could unbrick it since he has physical access. And a particular thief might not be able to, but he'll have connections who can, or something.
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There's no unbricking. I had a phone get reported stolen by an ex that wanted to fuck with me, and it was banned. All I got was the runaround whenever I went to the store or complained. They just told me to buy a new phone and here are our great offers for today. It has a happy ending though, I got a settlement form the phone company and got my ex arrested (who plead guilty to fraud, but got it lowered to a misdemeanor). Not a week later the same thing happened to my new phone, and this time the phone
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Thought problem (Score:3)
Suppose I own a museum and seek to make money by charging admission.
If seeing the museum has a certain importance to people - people must see the museum once in their lives, for instance - then I maximize my profit by raising prices as high as the situation will bear. To the limit that people need to see the museum, I can extract the most money.
Suppose instead the government fixes the museum ticket price but says nothing about how many people see the museum per day. Since I cannot raise prices I must sell m
Re:Stupid situation (Score:5, Informative)
The word the OP is looking for is "oligopoly". That's a monopolistic hold on a market by a small number of companies, but more than 1.
Linky: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oligopoly [wikipedia.org]
But what can you do to prevent this? (Score:2)
Re:But what can you do to prevent this? (Score:5, Informative)
It's GameStop's fault (Score:2)
Most of these criminals aren't reselling these devices at pawn shops or on Craig's list either. GameStop has made it very easy to take any modern smartphone or tablet into their store fronts for cash. They then take these devices that they got on the cheap and send them out to rural communities and sell them for just a shade under retail. GameStop's uncaring jerk wad management strikes again.
Isn't this common to all new tech? (Score:3)
When airplanes started to become more common, the number of crashes took off (no pun intended) simply because there were airplanes to crash.
The annual theft rate for automobiles was a perfect zero...until of course the automobile was invented.
It seems to me that accidents, crimes involving a particular technology, popular fashion item, etc. are naturally going to become a more significant portion of overall crime as they become popular. It reminds me of the sudden uptick in sneaker thefts when Air Jordans became popular.
Naivete, Stupidity, Etc. (Score:3, Insightful)
In the 70's (Score:4, Insightful)
As I write whenever the topic of smartphone muggings come up:
In the 70's, people were held up for their watch and cash (remember cash?). Different decade, different stuff.
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Cash is like a credit card made of fabric, but what's this 'watch' you speak of?
iPhone 5's are just too valuable right now (Score:2)
Even a properly blacklisted iPhone 5 is worth well over $200 for parts or for export into an area where blacklisting does not apply. To slow this type of violent crime the police and courts need to treat it more seriously. It is easy to spot an iPhone 5 and you would be hard pressed to find quickly an easier way to steal $200. Few used car radios or even flatscreen TVs are worth that on the hot market.
People who violently steal a cellphone should be put in jail the FIRST TIME for at least a year maybe mo
Cops should be able to retrieve phones (Score:2)
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With the proper inexpensive tracking tools, police could track down cell phones that have been stolen. This would lead them to people who probably have committed more than one crime as well.
With the proper inexpensive tracking tools police could track down .... well, anybody.
Careful what you ask for.
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It should be obvious to anyone with half a brain, but invasions of privacy don't happen because technology makes it easy but because of the corrupt people manning those tools.
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They can already do this. GSM providers in the USA elected to go with DtoA rather than GPS to provide positioning for E911. The result is that they all have the technology to locate your phone within a few meters any time it can see more than one cell site, whether it even has GPS or not. Plenty of phones have software loaded onto them which permits the carrier to switch GPS on and get your position, but that's not universal. I'd imagine that by now the CDMA carriers can do DtoA as well, but I have done abs
The solution exists, use it (Score:3)
The ability to deny service to a blacklisted device already is part of the GSM standard and the central registry needed to get this working:
http://www.gsma.com/technicalprojects/fraud-security/imei-database [gsma.com]
Now it is only a matter of getting the carriers to actually use this list to deny service. In most SGSN, all it takes is changing a config flag.
Yes, that hard!
Duh! (Score:2)
Well, duh!
It is a device that costs $200 upwards, small and a lot of people are carrying. The amount of cash one holds is usually meager and credit/debit cards are worthless because they can be rendered useless with one phone-call (someone pointed out above that it would be a good idea to have that bricking option for phones too). Expensive watches would be a good alternative for theft, but youngsters don't wear them, since they have a smartphone to tell the time with. The smartphone is the new Rolex.
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some smartphones are worth some cash even if blacklisted/banned.
the screen etc are still usable from it.
Took them long `nuff. (Score:2)
DRIVING violent crime? Seriously? (Score:2)
Smartphones Driving Violent Crime Across US
Are they? Are they really? Or is it just quicker, easier, and more productive for a mugger to demand your phone instead of your wallet these days?
Or is there a whole generation of kids who would otherwise never have thought to turn to crime except that all those phones are soooo shiny...
Yet another reason (Score:2)
...to stick with my (antique?) flip phone.
Besides, a big slab of glass and plastic looks much less cool than the flipper when you want to call "beam me up, Scotty."
(Okay, granted, even the latter isn't cool anymore, but...)
Happened to me (Score:2)
Blame the carriers (Score:2)
The cell phone companies have the ability to disable service for any phone permanently. They already do this in most of Europe and has almost eliminated cell phone thefts. The American companies resist doing this common sense action because they can still make money from stolen phones.
The answer is obvious (Score:2)
All smart phones need to be sold with a fire arm to protect it from theft.
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Don't be ridiculous. Just do what I did and chain your smart phone to a concrete block. Problem solved.
Giving thieves the finger (Score:2)
A number of smartphone providers have been talking about adding fingerprint readers to phones to make the security stronger. Over 40% of serious crime involves smart devices and half of those crimes are violent in some way, many at knife-point. Does anyone else worry that it won't take long for muggers to work out that if they take the phone they need to take your index finger too?
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On the other hand, so to speak, if you give a thief your fingerprint to unlock your phone when he steels it, he will have its use until it locks again. But if you teach the thief to reset this security feature with his own fingerprint, then it will be recorded in the system memory. And if the phone were traceable, then you could teach him a lesson for the rest of his life.
Note: I didn't intend to be sexist when writing this comment. On the off chance anyone feels left out, please feel free to switch the
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if they take the phone they need to take your index finger too?
Maybe you have been watching too much TV. The article is about the US, not Jamaica or the Congo.
Simple solution (Score:2)
Don't worry folks, the manufacturers have this in hand. By next year the accepted minimum screen size for a flagship phone will be 17", and cellphone thefts will be rendered impractical because by the time your poor thief has backed up his pick-up truck and got his accomplices to help him heave your phone into the back, the cops will have arrived...
Re:Serious crime? (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry, cell phone theft is not serious crime. Serious crime is genocide, murder, rape, molesting children, kidnapping, torture, etc.
Sticking a gun in somebody's face, threatening them with a knife, or beating them are serious crimes. The others you listed are more serious but this isn't some case of some iPhanboi having an emotional breakdown because his iToys were stolen, if you read TFA you'd notice a great mean of these robberies are armed, involve physical violence, or the direct threat of it. Maybe that isn't "serious" where you come from, but if it isn't, you have my sympathies. Let me know if you need me to recommend a good realtor.
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Okay, I was exaggerating. Armed robbery is certainly a serious crime. I agree with that and was a bit too fast with my post.
However, I've come up with an easy solution: Just rig the cellphones with explosives that can be detonated by sending the right message to it. That way, if somebody walks away with your iPhone, just blow him up.
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(A) Already there today
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20130413/16102322700/san-diego-cop-thinks-you-might-have-turned-your-cell-phone-into-gun-that-officer-safety-trumps-constitutional-rights.shtml [techdirt.com]
(B) I fully expected you to say that the biggest problem would be other people figuring out your code and sending it to your phone while you still had it.
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It might have been one of these: http://www.amazon.com/Guard-Dog-Security-Phone-Volts/dp/B003XI5RYK [amazon.com]
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4. Cop pulls cell phone out of your car and starts writing up your citation.
5. Pull out backup cellphone, blow up cop, drive away. No ticket!
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Manhunt? Hahahaha. Police are too busy arresting high school honor students making Drano bombs in empty fields to be bothered with petty criminals.
Type II Error (was Re:Serious crime?) (Score:2)
I just love how people who constantly complain about how buggy and unreliable everything is--and justifiably so, by and large--imagine that there's no way to activate a booby trap by mischance or hostility.
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To steal a line from Mel Brooks "Bullshit, bullshit, aaaaannnnnddd bullshit". Here are the facts, 1.-The "cell phone gun" has a NON WORKING SCREEN because naturally there is no room to put electronics into it and still have room for the firing mechanism. 2.- It looks like a real cell phone ONLY FROM A DISTANCE as things like fake screen and cheap plastic keypad makes it look like one of the $1 toys you get in stores like Family Dollar for little kids, no way somebody is gonna mistake or be unable to tell the difference if they are close enough to knock it out of your hand.
As for TFA and the suggestions to use things like IMEI to makes phones easy to trace? It might catch the criminal after he tried to pawn it but it won't stop them from beating or even killing somebody for their iPhone because...well lets face it folks, criminals aren't the brightest of bulbs at the best of times. I mean how many times have we seen a criminal who has killed somebody and stolen their CCs and bank cards just standing at an ATM with the cards, no trying to hide their face or anything? With the cameras practically staring them right in the face?
So while various tracing measures can be used to bust the criminal after expecting to lower crime by tracing won't work because criminals are morons that are attracted to shiny objects, period the end.
You're thinking much too far... The reason phones are stolen is because there is a market for stolen phones. Without it, there is little point in stealing phones.
The best solution isn't "tracing" anything because ultimately it will be difficult to prove who stole which phone and from whom, but it would be trivial for the carriers to simply pledge to honor a "do not service" blacklist of handsets that have been reported stolen by their owners. Doing this instantly demolishes the market for stolen phones: If
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Hell if for no other reason they'd keep stealing them because having certain models are status symbols, whether they work or not being seen with one is a status thing.
Let's walk through that scenario...
GuyWhoStoleNowUselessiPhone: Hey man, check out my iPhone!
Dude's Buddy: Sweet, what's your number, you can text me the picture of those girls...
GuyWhoStoleNowUselessiPhone: Oh, well...
The status comes from having a working device--non-working marks you as a poser.
Would it help? Possibly but I doubt it, criminals just aren't that bright, look at how many cut open fiber optics to steal copper, or electrocute themselves trying to steal power lines which is worth less per pound than a set of rims off a sportscar.
It would undeniably help, and even if there were still some mobile phone thefts, they reduction in incidence would statistically require a massive reduction in violent incidents.
Again, you're thinking too narrowly
Dye pack (Score:2)
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I can't see myself feeling very comfortable with a electronically-detonated grenade in my pocket that was manufactured in China.
Chances are, either it won't go off when you need it - or it will go off in your pants.
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This is not true. I read on the Guns are Better than Sex site that crime in Great Britain is going up because they don't have guns. Are you telling me that an American who enjoys fellating guns has lied? No way!
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I think most of us grew up learning in school that kicks, threats, and robbery aren't really taken seriously. Drugs, on the other hand
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Sorry, cell phone theft is not serious crime. Serious crime is genocide, murder, rape, molesting children, kidnapping, torture, etc.
So I can come over and punch you in the head a few times, and then steal a few TVs? Assault and theft over $500 is serious crime.
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So I can come over and punch you in the head a few times, and then steal a few TVs?
You could try... but I don't have a TV.
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I don't either. However, I do have a knife, a rifle, a good long head-breaking stick, and a fake sword that could at least break an arm.
I don't think it would work out so well for him.
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The loss itself may not be, but if you beat somebody up for their phone it's still a violent crime.
I think the more interesting statistic is that 579 cell phone/tablet thefts accounts for 41% of violent crime. Even if we assume that all 579 thefts were violent in nature, that's still only 1412 violent crimes. In a city the size of San Francisco over that time period, wouldn't the "think of the children" lobby have us believe that the rate is much higher?
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It would be nice to see if the last 10 years have continued that trend, or reversed it.
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Sorry, cell phone theft is not serious crime. Serious crime is genocide, murder, rape, molesting children, kidnapping, torture, etc.
Serious crime is what the carriers is charging us for data connections and SMS messaging.
Re:There's no real excuse for violence (Score:5, Funny)
There's no real excuse for punching someone or threatening them with violence when taking their smartphone.
If they are making a call while the rest of us are trying to watch the movie, I think this treatment should be mandatory.
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But it just works.
It works until you steal MY phone.
After that you will spend the rest of your life in a wheelchair.
Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil for lo I am the meanest SOB in the valley.
(common prison posting)
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Nähhh, I'm pretty sure that you'll remain addicted and that it will sooner or later be your undoing.
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Doesn't have anything to do with skin color.
Unless you're trying to suggest if -I- were to do it, you'd not shoot at me?
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Jackass, this is slashdot not 4chan.