The new govt web portal will help you find your lost or stolen mobile phone
The launch of the portal, http://www.ceir.gov.in, for Delhi-NCR subscribers will make the requests for blocking of stolen or lost mobile phones by customers, blocking of such mobile phones across various mobile networks, allowing services to other existing customers having a mobile phones with the same International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) number, sharing of traceability data with police authorities, as well as unblocking of recovered phones easier.
The initiative is supported by the Central Equipment Identity Register (CEIR) system, which was undertaken by the telecom department for addressing security, theft and other issues including reprogramming of mobile handsets.
Launching the initiative, Telecom Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said that the safety and security of phones are crucial given the country’s technological strides and digital prowess. “While we make optimum use of technology for development, there are equally smart criminals who abuse technology for their own ends,” Prasad said. The latest initiative is expected to benefit 5 crore mobile subscribers in Delhi and adjoining areas.
“Delhi telecom subscribers whose phones get stolen or those who lose their phones can log into the web portal from today… they can go to the portal and register their complaint, along with which they will also have to upload the police complaint and their own ID proof. Based on this, the lost mobile will be blocked. Also if someone uses it, the same can be traced based on the tower signals so the police can also recover the device,” Telecom Secretary Anshu Prakash shared.
While speaking further, Prakash said the International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) is the special identity of mobile phone devices. IMEI number is programmable and miscreants and criminals reprogramme the 15-digit unique number, which results in the cloning of IMEI. The result is multiple phone devices, at times even hundreds of numbers, with the same IMEI number.
If such IMEI is blocked, a large number of mobile phones stand the risk of being blocked (as they are handsets with the same IMEI number) causing inconvenience to genuine customers. The software that has been developed now allows an individual phone to be blocked even if it is on a cloned IMEI number.
Moreover, because of the centralised nature of the register or database, all the operators can block the particular stolen or lost device across the country even though the phone is being serviced by one particular operator. “This will also reduce the market for stolen phones,” Prakash added.
Asked about the progress of the initiative in Mumbai, where it had been announced a few months back, Prakash said as many as 500-600 complaints were logged in Mumbai. “In 50 per cent of the cases in Mumbai, traceability information has been handed over to the police. Also remember, much depends on whether the phone is being used after it has been stolen… If someone does not use it, it cannot be traced, but it can certainly be blocked. They won’t be able to sell it,” he said.