Posts Tagged ‘Cell Phone’

If you trust your ‘life’ to your cell phone, back it up!

Monday, March 15th, 2010

It has been drilled into us for as long as I can remember.  We are constantly reminded of it. Computers fail. Back-ups are a must.  The consequences of failing to adequately and regularly back-up your data can be costly.  Much of what is lost can never be recovered. What can, will take time and money.  Most of us have already learned this lesson. Backing up our computers has become part of our life.  We got the message.  Unfortunately, many have failed to connect that message to their cell phones!

Cell phones have become so much a part of our lives that they now contain most of the information critical to our daily ‘survival.’  We no longer even remember phone numbers of family members or our closest friends. For most, our phones are the only place these phone numbers exist. For others, it is also the only place birthdates, anniversaries, and email and physical addresses for friends, family and business colleagues are stored.   We trust our appointments, task lists, photos, music and more to these indispensible devices.  What few think about – cell phones fail too! And as with computers, the consequences of their failure are costly.

Cell phones today, especially smart phones, are essentially small hand held computers, yet we fail to treat them as such. They are used and abused and no thought is given to what happens when they fail. And, unlike computers, they are also far more likely to be damaged, lost or misplaced, thereby increasing the potential for losing data.  We are no longer surprised that, on any given week, several people come in desperate to recover data that had been stored on their phones because they never thought about or took the time to back it up. Sadly, most often, the information they want to retrieve cannot be recovered. The best advice for avoiding this kind of problem? – Think computer, and back up your cell phone data regularly.

There are a number of options that exist for backing up your data:

  • Memory cards – Most phones today accept SD (secure digital) cards.  The best advice is to store your photos, videos and music on these cards. If the phone fails or is replaced, your information remains safe and can be readily moved.  (It’s still recommended that these cards be copied to another location in the event the phone is lost.)
  • Online, wireless back up – Many service providers and several independent companies offer a remote back up service.  For a monthly fee you can back up the contact information (and more) on your phone automatically or on demand.  This service will allow you to then restore the information to a replacement phone.  The cost can be as little as $2 per month.  Keep in mind if you switch service providers, you may not be able to ‘restore’ your data to the new phone.
  • Pre-packaged software – Most smart phones and PDAs are packaged with the necessary software and USB cables to sync your device with your computer.  (The hardest part for me to understand is the number of business users with these devices that fail to utilize this software only to lose everything!!)  The software easily installs on your PC, takes a few minutes to configure initially, then automatically syncs your phone with your PC each time it’s connected.
  • Independent software – There are a number of companies that offer software and USB packages that allow you to back up and modify your data on your computer. These work well and are reasonably priced.  Take note that some are model / brand specific and not all models are supported so changing brand or model of phone could be a hassle, but your data will be safe.
  • Back up services offered by a local store / repair center – Most offer a convenient service that allows the transfer of data from one phone to another, but a few specialized shops offer services that will make a true back up copy of your data.  The service we offer includes providing a print out or spreadsheet file if desired, storing the primary back-up on a secure system, and storing a second copy off site.

There are additional options out there as well – just be sure to use one and back up your cell phone data on a regular basis.  If you need help finding the best solution, just give us a shout!

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Cell phone spoofing: You can’t trust your caller I.D.

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Re-published with permission from Dan Marries at KOLD News 13, Tucson; original story and video can be found at http://www.kold.com/Global/story.asp?S=11989659

By Mika Highsmith – bio | email

TOLEDO, OH (WTOL) – While many use caller I.D. to protect privacy and screen phone calls, that option is being taken away by an activity called spoofing.

Spoofem.com owner Greg Evans says spoofing is simple. The user enters the number they want to appear on the caller I.D. It can be any number, from the White House to your grandmother’s house.

“You can masquerade an email, a telephone number, or a text message and make it look like it came from someone else,” Evans said.

In addition to faking an email or text message, spoofing includes features like voice disguising and call recording.

Spoofing can be dangerous because it can be used for such nefarious purposes as checking someone’s unprotected voicemail and calling from a local bank asking for sensitive information.

If that isn’t scary enough, spoofing helps scam artists cheat millions of Americans.

One scam victim received a phone call, supposedly from her grandson asking for $5,000 because he’d been injured. The caller I.D. read “Toronto Hospital.”

These scammers make big bucks for a small price, spending only $10 for 60 minutes of spoofing. And as the economy goes down, the number of victims will only go up, says Dick Eppstein of Toledo’s Better Business Bureau.

“Understand this exists, and you can not trust your caller I.D.,” Eppstein warned. He says catching scam artists isn’t easy. “You find out the guys who’s doing it is in Madrid, what do you do then?”

Though spoofing is proven to have a level of danger, it is still easily accessible. A bill was proposed to Congress in 2007 that would have prohibited the sale of caller I.D. spoofing services, but it never passed.

Senator Sherrod Brown says banning it all together would be unconstitutional and others argue there are good uses for it. Legitimate bounty hunters, private investigators and collection agencies, for example, use spoofing to help catch criminals.

“You have to reach a balance, draw a line here where you want legitimate free speech and legitimate profit making activities to be allowed,” Brown said.

However, Brown admits the laws aren’t keeping up with technology, and to remedy that, the U.S. Senate is considering a bill that would make fraudulent use of spoofing illegal.

But crooks don’t abide by laws, so you must protect yourself.

  • Set up a password for your voicemail; it’s even possible for iPhone users with visual voicemail
  • Be sure to verify all calls before reacting and never give out personal information
  • Ask if you can call them back, if they protest or hang up, you can almost be sure you’re being spoofed.

Copyright 2010 WTOL. All Rights Reserved.

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