Welcome to Cyber19 one plus one vs nexus Upgrade to Windows 10! For Repair & Maintenance Stay Connected

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

How to Track Your Lost or Stolen Android Phone

 
Your smartphone is a bit of everything. You have all your photos, important documents and friend’s contact list on it. Losing one or having it stolen is the worst nightmare one shall have. Taking that into perspective, we have narrowed down few steps one should carry in case his/her smartphone gets lost.

How to Track Your Lost or Stolen Android Phone

STEP 1:

First and foremost thing after buying a smartphone is to write down the IMEI number of your phone. Every smartphone has a unique IMEI number (International Mobile Equipment Identity Number). A dual SIM phone will have 2 IMEI number. It will be printed on the back of your device. If you are unable to find the number, you have to launch your phone app and dial the number *#06#. This will give you the IMEI number of your phone. Store this number in a safe place so that it helps you in locating your phone when it is lost. Another way of finding an IMEI number is by logging into google dashboard account.
If your phone gets lost, you can file a Police complaint by dialing 100. You have to provide IMEI number of your phone while filing a police complaint and then your service provider (NTC/NCell) uses this IMEI number to track your phone.
How IMEI tracking works?
Your Network provider will blacklist the given IMEI number and when the thief inserts a new SIM on that phone, the BTS (Tower) will receive the details of the new SIM inserted. From that details of the new SIM, you will know the thief’s name and all the details.

STEP 2:

CaptureDownload Google’s Android Device Manager (Link). If you lose your phone, you can just visit www.google.com/android/devicemanager website and locate it with your Google account. Using this, you can find it on a map, ring it, lock it, or remotely erase it. This service will be the best option for most Android users.

 STEP 3:

Turn on Photos sync on Google photos or use DropBox. Syncing your camera photos can be a good idea. A clever idea indeed, if it works. The suspected thief can use your camera and click some selfies or photos and you can view their photos from your google plus account.

STEP 4:

Inform your friends and family of the theft. It’s possible that the thief may try to impersonate you through social media or via SMS.

No comments:

Post a Comment