One iPhone led police to gang who sent 40,000 snatched phones to China (www.bbc.com)
from fne8w2ah@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 23:56
https://lemmy.world/post/37039685

#technology

threaded - newest

muusemuuse@sh.itjust.works on 08 Oct 02:49 next collapse

You better eat that entire iPhone. There are starving children building them in china!

DeathByBigSad@sh.itjust.works on 08 Oct 03:41 next collapse

Cops actually doing something? Wow, my opinion of them is now only 99.99% negative

>looks at linkBritish Broadcasting Channel”

>check location Ah, there we go, “UK”; American cops would just be eating donuts and getting fat

MurrayL@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 08:02 next collapse

(it’s British Broadcasting Corporation)

dubyakay@lemmy.ca on 08 Oct 15:00 collapse

British Bong Cooperative

swagmoney@lemmy.ca on 08 Oct 15:41 collapse

🅱️ritish 🅱️ong cloud

nanoswarm9k@lemmus.org on 08 Oct 11:36 next collapse

Donuts worked out beating the shit out of people in custody if they don’t smell like good private lawyer.

StarlightDust@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 08 Oct 12:36 next collapse

Nah our cops are also absolutely awful racists who never actually do any good too.

yesman@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 14:22 next collapse

The phone was probably stolen from a protestor they were investigating and the bust was coincidental.

D_C@sh.itjust.works on 08 Oct 17:35 collapse

Fatter*

LodeMike@lemmy.today on 08 Oct 04:13 next collapse

How the fuck does this go on for 40,000 phones? Are phones in China not like in the western world where they’re effectively bricks without the ability to unlock them? Does nobody have FindMy or similar?

monkeyslikebananas2@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 05:23 next collapse

The stolen phones can be broken up for parts. They probably aren’t just reselling the devices whole.

tahoe@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 06:50 collapse

As far as I know recent iPhones all have parts pairing, so you can’t swap parts between phones unless Apple authorises it. Absolutely sucks ass for repairability, but it’s supposed to help in the context of stolen phones.

I guess thieves found a way to circumvent it, otherwise it wouldn’t make sense

MurrayL@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 08:05 collapse

I guess thieves found a way to circumvent it, otherwise it wouldn’t make sense

Even if they haven’t (yet), it’s still a recent development. There are plenty of old models out there without it, not to mention Android phones which hold the majority market share in the UK.

mikedd@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 06:03 next collapse

The phones are returning home 😅

ayyy@sh.itjust.works on 08 Oct 06:47 next collapse

China could very well be the redistribution point to elsewhere in the world. When you’re the global hub of shipping it’s much easier for a few bonus goods to make their way around the system.

thr0w4w4y2@sh.itjust.works on 08 Oct 07:35 next collapse

There’s a carefully designed process that involves sealing the phones in faraday bags so they can’t communicate with the outside worlds, and then replacing/reprogramming certain components so the phone works outside of the Find My ecosystem.

These phones are reprogrammed and re-chipped en masse and then sent all over the world. See all those “mobile phone repair” shops all over your high street/strip mall? they’re all getting their stock from the same place.

Apple operating the hardware pairing scheme is just a cat and mouse game with this industry.

lechekaflan@lemmy.world on 09 Oct 00:33 collapse

There’s a lot of reasons iPhones are specifically targeted for theft. Besides China being a giant hub for fences.

  • There are FOMO or vain people who want one for cheap… and almost new. Just like their hankering for Louis Vuitton bags and Gucci scarves.
  • There are those third party repair shops who want cheap parts for repairing other iPhones instead of asking from Apple.
  • There are those who buy them en masse for their scam and spam farms.
  • And in some places and for certain groups, it’s safer and more profitable than selling meth.
parody@lemmings.world on 08 Oct 18:33 next collapse

Video audio inaccurate? Maybe the guy was the Afghan national or it’s a different raid.

Article said Afghan guy, video said both woman and man were Bulgarian nationals.

altphoto@lemmy.today on 08 Oct 19:27 next collapse

That’s the power of just one LED right there.

Blackmist@feddit.uk on 08 Oct 19:42 collapse

Wouldn’t it be easier to steal them in China? It’s where most of them come from after all.

SomethingBurger@jlai.lu on 08 Oct 22:39 next collapse

stolen devices are being sold in China for up to £4,000 each, given they are internet-enabled and more attractive for those trying to bypass censorship

I’m guessing buyers specifically want non-Chinese devices, and stealing from individuals is easier than from a factory.

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 09 Oct 00:40 collapse

Seems like something you could accomplish with jailbreaking. Or perhaps a bit of soddering.

These devices aren’t magic. Stealing and shipping phones at this scale halfway around the world seems inefficient to say the least.

But I guess organized criminals and their clients aren’t always that smart.

Soup@lemmy.world on 09 Oct 01:46 collapse

It’s not about efficiency, it’s about it working. They don’t exactly need to do it at a price point because it’s a “price is what I say it is” kind of deal.

chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 23:55 next collapse

I wouldn’t be surprised if they had guards armed with SMGs and full body armour guarding the shipments as they leave the factory.

Since Apple shrunk the packaging they could probably fit a million iPhones in one shipping container. Think how much that’d be worth!

mojofrododojo@lemmy.world on 09 Oct 00:27 collapse

There’s a pixar film here where a phone get sent to the US, but misses it’s manufacturer and like the one ring leaps from owner to thief to fence to reseller in china…