Our Blog, Lost
New Yougetitback.com Software
Wednesday, October 15th, 2008To date we have covered Symbian and BlackBerry smartphones, feedback has been really strong to date. We are pretty close to cracking Windows Mobile , we have seen the first version in the last week here in Yougetitback.com HQ and it is very impressive.
Before the new smartphone software goes live we will be launching our new Laptop Superhero in November. This will be going live in a major deal we have signed in Spain – more details when the time gets closer.
The laptop superhero has some great features allowing the good guy to easily return it(without trying to break through your windows password) and allows you to lock your laptop remotely if it is lost or stolen. From demoing to industry people they reckon it is one of the best applications they have seen for the past 18 months – looking forward to getting lots of feedback.
Posted in Lost | No Comments »97% want Oyster Phones
Tuesday, October 14th, 2008Interesting blog post by Adam Cohen Rose about the recent Mobile Monday event in london.
Claire Maslen the Head of NFC, O2 Telefonica detailed the trial of Oyster phone.
Claire gave a good overview of the O2 NFC Trial, as reported in the Evening Standard by the headline “9 out of 10 people would like an Oyster phone!”
* 500 O2 customers with a Nokia 6131 NFC for 6 months
o Oyster
o Barclaycard Visa
o Access control at the O2
o One use case of smart posters
* O2 owned the customer data
* “Agency said at the end that this was the most compelling evidence they had seen for rolling out a new technology”
Oyster integration
* Worked with Transys and TfL for the Oyster card implementation
* 87% said that Oyster in their phone would drive their decision to buy a mobile phone — interesting to mobile operators
Barclaycard Paywave
* less people than Oyster said they were interested, but then Paywave is not common usage yet
* more efficient for retailers than cash but only 47% said they’d be interested in going further
Other results
* Were people happy to leave their homes with just their phone?
* Customers initially complained that 6131 was too low-end, but realised that applications were what was useful (perhaps they felt that Series 40 is a better interface than Series 60?)
o However, it’s not one size fits all
* People were happy with using stored value without a PIN
How can we add more value?
* put a loyalty card in it
* do more smart posters — didn’t have enough to really try it out
o only use case was touching a Tutankhamun poster
o got a mobile internet page about the exhibition with a link to the TfL mobile site
T Mobile Mobile data loss causes Boardroom Bustup
Tuesday, October 14th, 2008Deutsche Telekom said at the weekend that a technical error made it possible to use stolen passwords to access data on 30 million mobile phone customers. The company said it had closed this security gap on Thursday.
A bust up the German carrier’s board room is imminent with lots of fingerpointing re data security . This latest gaffe comes after recently admitting this month that thieves hijacked sensitive data on millions of Deutsche Telekom mobile phone customers in 2006.
Posted in Lost | No Comments »Credit Crunch will drive Mobile Banking
Tuesday, October 14th, 2008An interesting post at Computerweekly which argues that the credit crunch will drive a new business model with fewer staff and fewer fixed costs.
Japan’s Ebank is setting the trend and manages 3 million customers with 200 staff. “With a corporate vision that mobile computing can give customers their own personal branch in the future it is an example of a company that has totally automated its business using the latest technology.
One of the major attractions of eBank is that it offers services via mobile phone which opens it up to many more people, says Chris Skinner, CEO at financial services think-tank Balatro.”
A possible silver lining in the current financial maelstorm. They say most technical innovation happens during times of war – this would equate to financial WW III so interesting to see the new business models top emerge.
Posted in Lost | No Comments »Identity Theft is a bigger worry than mugging
Monday, October 13th, 2008A Populus Poll carried out on behalf of Fellowes showed that 81% of the British public were concerned about becoming a victim of identity theft. The survey also showed that identity theft was of greater concern than other crimes like burglary, mugging and pickpocketing to people in the UK.
Identity fraud costs the UK more than £1 billion every year, and has already affected more than 4 million adults in Britain.
100,000 pensioners’ details on Deloitte stolen laptop
Monday, October 13th, 2008A laptop containing data on around 100,000 pensioners was stolen last month. The computer, which contained pensioners’ names, National Insurance numbers and salary details, was in a handbag snatched from an employee of accounting firm Deloitte.
Deloitte said the machine was protected by security measures, and there was only a “very very low” risk of anyone being able to access the data.
Deloitte said it had notified police of the theft, and informed its clients, who in turn have contacted all of the pensioners whose data was on the laptop. No addresses or bank account details were stored on the machine, the company said.
Posted in Lost | No Comments »New Blackberry Storm
Wednesday, October 8th, 2008The New Blackberry Storm , RIM’s first touchscreen phone is getting rave reviews. It is being touted as the iPhone killer , it may slow down the iPhones drive into the Enterprise market. Looking forward to test driving it, the typing ability is apparently very good.

Yougetitback.com Testimonial
Monday, October 6th, 2008A yougetitback.com customer , Steve O Donnell, has blogged about the recovery of his Nokia N95 that was tagged with a yougetitback.com tag. We see it every day but Steve sums it up when he says “People are basically honest and if you make it easy for them to be honest they do the right thing.”
Posted in Lost | 1 Comment »20% of discarded phones have sensitive data
Friday, October 3rd, 2008All of us have a few old mobile phones lying around , seemingly harmless but 20% of 2nd-hand Mobile Phones Contain Sensitive Information
New research from BT, the University of Glamorgan in Wales and Edith Cowan University in Australia has revealed that a significant number of mobile phones which are bought second-hand still contain sensitive company and personal information.
The major culprit are smartphones including Blackberry. Some information found include banking details, details of board meetings, personal medical details. In one example, a Blackberry was examined that had been used by the sales director for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) of a major Japanese corporation. It was possible to recover the call history, the address book, the diary and the email messages from the device. – Scary stuff indeed.
My tip for the day ( shameless plug) – get Mobile Superhero and lock your blackberry down when you upgrade.
Posted in Lost | No Comments »Smartphones security risk is growing
Tuesday, September 30th, 2008According to Gartner analyst John Girard , speaking at the Garther IT Security Summit in London today , wireless identity theft and phishing attempts targeting mobile devices will become more and more prevalent next year.
Now that businesses can actually conduct business on smartphones they are getting more open to security lapses whihc have been prevalent on pcs for years.
Girard listed 9 ways of increasing security on your smartphone.
1. Educate users on the importance of security and ways to avoid the loss of their mobile devices and laptops.
2. Be sure password protection is set to “on” for all mobile devices. Most come with some built-in password protection, and higher levels of access security can be added through third-party applications.
3. Install a mobile management system that enforces reasonable data security policies on the widest possible range of mobile, wireless devices.
4. Determine which files can and cannot be downloaded and by which users, and enforce these rules through any means available, including port locking, protecting the company’s most sensitive and regulated data from exposure.
5. Encrypt either individual files or the entire contents of the mobile device, depending on the organization’s security needs, both for transmission and storage of sensitive information on mobile devices.
6. Enforce connection/VPN security standards for all transmissions to mobile devices to ensure transmission security.
7. Require active firewall protection and virus protection on all mobile devices and update the firewall and virus protection regularly through downloads from a central server.
8. Enable device lockdown and “kill” functions so that, for instance, if a device does not connect to the corporate network for 24 or 48 hours, or if it does attempt to connect after being reported missing, it automatically wipes the data in its memory clean.
9. Log device use to access any data defined as sensitive in regulations or otherwise considered sensitive by the organization (for instance, corporate financials, research results and customer data).
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