Application for Blocking Stolen Phones Developed By a Nigerian Company
A mobile
application that can make a device unusable by thieves, to curb theft or resale
of mobile phones and other gadgets have been developed by a Nigerian company -E.F.
Network Ltd.
The company’s public relations officer Mr. Ameh
Ochojila said this in a statement on Tuesday, in Abuja.
The application named ‘ephonetaxi’ will help provide a solution to the growing
number of stolen phones in the country and across the globe Ochojila said.
“The application ‘ephonetaxi’ helps to lock
out anyone who is unauthorised to use the phone, making it unusable and
unsellable,”.
According to him, the application is designed
to protect phone owners and the information stored on their phones from being
compromised in the event of phone theft. “The application helps retrieve and
send the user’s stored contents to his email.
“It also locks the phone, prevents either
unauthorised access to stored pictures, videos, messages, or contacts of the
phone owner.
“The app alerts the phone owner of any change
in SIM card, monitors, and tracks the phone location including taking pictures
of criminals in possession of the phone and sending the pictures to the email
address of the owner,” he said.
Ochojila
added, “The owner can do all these remotely in spite of the phone being lost or
stolen. “Once a phone is locked remotely by the owner, buying it will be a mere
waste of money.”
The
technical manager of the company, Mr. Kelvin Raymond said that the application
could also be used to trace kidnappers as it can reveal the real-time location of
mobile phones.
Mr. Gideon
Egbuchulam, Chairman of the company said that the application was one of the
application lined up by the company to meet technical and software needs of
Nigerians.
Egbuchulam
said that the company had opened an incubation centre in Abuja where he planned
to recruit brilliant young Nigerian Information Technology (IT) professionals.
“Given enabling environment, Nigerian youths will take Nigeria to the next
Silicon Valley in Africa.
“Almost all
giant tech companies in the world are interested in the Nigerian market and
that is the reason our company is recruiting over 1000 people by the end of
2020 to support talented youths,” he said.
The News
Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that available data showed that in 2016 alone,
over 400,000 phones were stolen in the UK, with a good number of them shipped
abroad for resale.
The data
also showed that many of the stolen phones were first sold to criminal gangs
who tried to access them for information that could be used to hack bank
accounts of their owners, before selling them to end users.
(NAN)
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