How to recover your lost or stolen phones, tablets, and other devices
Technology is increasingly the target of crimes, but it can also be used to fight back against the perpetrators.
Dennis O'Reilly by Dennis O'Reilly  August 28, 2013 10:15 AM PDT
Your
 camera is stolen. Drag an image you shot with the device into a Web 
page and a free service searches popular photo sites for other images 
taken with the camera. If the thief posted a picture taken with the 
camera to his or her personal account, he or she is busted.
Your
 laptop, smartphone, or tablet is stolen. Sign into your Dropbox or 
Gmail account and look for the most recent IP address used when 
accessing the account. If the service is set to log in to the account on
 startup, or if the thief tries to access your Dropbox or Gmail account,
 his or her IP address will appear there. Take the information along 
with the police report of the theft to the police and the robber's ISP 
will identify the crook.
These
 are just two examples of tools available to the victims of crimes that 
can assist them in retrieving their stolen items. In some cases, the
 devices were merely lost and the finders may need some help (or 
encouragement) to return the products to their rightful owners.
There's
 plenty you can do before, during, and after you lose a Web-connected 
device to increase the chances the gizmo will find its way back to you.
Before it goes missing, capture the model and serial numbers
The
 key to recovering lost or stolen electronics is to know their pertinent
 digits -- in this case, their model and serial numbers. If you file a 
police report for stolen equipment, the form will ask for this 
information, and having the serial number makes it much easier to 
reclaim your property.
If 
you have a homeowners or renters insurance policy, you've probably been 
instructed to photograph your valuable personal property. When
 snapping shots of your computers and other electronics equipment, 
you're better off capturing the bottom or back of the device -- wherever
 the model and serial numbers are located -- than the top or front.
If
 your stuff goes missing before you've had a chance to grab any ID 
numbers, all is not lost (or stolen). My wife chides me for holding onto
 the boxes for the electronics I purchase. I tell her it's because I may
 have to return the device if it turns out to be defective, but the box 
also has the product's model and serial number printed on it. Even if 
you don't need to keep your receipts for tax purposes, the sales slips 
also have the products' model and serial numbers.
Put your contact info in a prominent location
Make
 it easy for someone finding your phone, tablet, or laptop to return it 
by placing a
 contact e-mail address or telephone number on the product's lock 
screen. You do use a lock screen for all your portable devices, right? 
Losing your hardware is tough enough. You don't want to make matters 
worse by giving thieves or less-than-honest finders access to your 
personal data. The few seconds a day it takes to enter passcodes is time
 well-spent.
One of the 
tips in my post from last September titled "How to lock down and find 
Android and Windows phones" explained how to add contact info on an 
Android phone's lock screen. The post "How to prevent phone and tablet 
theft" described the process of using an image with your contact info as
 your lock-screen wallpaper.
If
 you haven't already, make sure you install a find-my-device app for 
your phone or tablet. My post from August 2011 titled "Keep your iPad 
data safe" covered the free Find My Phone app for
 iPhones and iPads. Last September's post on locking and finding Android
 and Windows phone described the remote-find feature built into Windows 
phones, which is tied to your Windows Live account. One of the products I
 reviewed earlier this month in "Essential free productivity apps for 
Android tablets" Is Lookout Mobile Security, which lets you locate a 
lost Android device. Google recently released the Android Device Manager
 that helps you track down missing Android phones and tablets.
An
 open-source alternative for tracking laptops, phones, and tablets is 
the free Prey program, which is available for Windows, Mac OS, iOS, 
Linux, and Android devices. After you download the app to your computer 
or device, it stays hidden in the background. The program uses the 
device's GPS or the nearest Wi-Fi hotspots to determine its location.
Prey
 can establish a connection
 to the nearest open Wi-Fi access point if it can't find an Internet 
connection. You may be able to take a picture of the thief with the 
device's camera or capture a screenshot of the active session to grab 
the crook's Facebook or e-mail sign-in. (Note that I haven't tested the 
product; this information is from the developer's site.)
During a robbery, make like Chili Palmer
If
 you find yourself in the unfortunate circumstance of being robbed, the 
consensus of law enforcement is to do as the robber asks. No iPhone is 
worth risking serious injury over. You can help the police by noting any
 distinguishing characteristics of the thief.
According
 to a profane Craigslist post by a New York City police officer, the 
things to note are sex, clothing, color, clothing type, headware, and 
direction of flight. The officer
 emphasizes that you should call the police as quickly as possible. 
Considering that you probably just had your phone stolen, this may not 
be so easy. I can't remember the last time I saw a functioning payphone,
 let alone used one. Look for a restaurant, grocery store, or bar 
nearby, or ask a bystander if you can use his or her phone to make the 
call.
Be as precise as 
possible when you give the 911 operator your location, but keep in mind 
it will probably take several minutes for the police to arrive. Once 
they do, channel Sgt. Joe Friday
 of the LAPD (showing my age) and stick with the facts. Resist the 
temptation to whine or complain. Provide as much accurate information as
 you can for the police report. Don't even think about not filing a 
police report if you have even a glimmer of hope of retrieving your lost
 items or collecting on an insurance claim.
Should
 you ever discover that your home or business has been robbed, first 
make sure you don't surprise the burglars. Some experts advise that you 
exit immediately and call the police, and don't enter at all if you see a
 door or window has obviously been forced open. In any event, don't 
start tidying up or otherwise disturb the scene any more than safety 
dictates. You may wipe out some useful clues for investigators.
Tools and techniques for getting your stolen stuff back
On
 the other hand, the police are pretty busy and may not have time or 
resources available for much -- or any -- investigating. In addition to 
using a locator app, you can register your electronic devices and other 
valuables with the free Immobilize national product registry and its 
companion services, the CheckMEND and Trace databases of items reported 
stolen.
The Trace database of stolen items
After
 you register your electronics and other valuables at the free 
Immobilize site, they'll be added to the Trace database of stolen items 
to prevent their resale and help police find and return them.
(Credit: Screenshot by Dennis O'Reilly/CNET)
Start
 by creating an inventory of your property at Immobilize (which is also 
available in the UK as Immobilise). If you're the victim of a robbery, 
report the crime to the police and your insurance company. Immobilize 
issues a "certificate of ownership" intended to facilitate filing a 
claim or identifying your property when it's recovered.
Next,
 report the stolen items to the Trace and CheckMEND services that 
police, second-hand sellers, and the public use to
 identify products reported as lost or stolen. Should one of their 
checks turn up an item of yours, it will be easy for them to contact 
you, and you'll have the information you need to reclaim it.
Another
 option for reporting lost and stolen items is the Stolen Register, a 
worldwide database of misplaced property. Stolen Register lets you enter
 a serial number, model number, or other identifying information in a 
search box and retrieve matching items from its product database.
Stolen Register product search
Before
 you purchase a second-hand item, enter its serial number or other ID in
 the Stolen Register to make sure the product hasn't been reported lost 
or stolen.
(Credit: Screenshot by Dennis O'Reilly/CNET)
You
 can
 search for items by type, whether reported lost or stolen, by time, and
 by location, including proximity to your current location (within 10 
miles or 50 miles). Stolen Register uses your Facebook name and e-mail 
address to identify you; when you sign up, Facebook indicates that the 
service is also asking for access to your friends list and profile, but 
Stolen Register claims this is due to Facebook's sharing procedure.
When
 you report a lost or stolen item on Stolen Register, you can provide a 
description along with its serial number and other identifying 
information. The service lets you upload a photo of the product and plot
 where it was lost on a Google Map. After you register your property you
 can view a list of the items you've reported lost.
A
 popular outlet for thieves selling stolen goods is Craigslist. To 
facilitate searching the site for someone
 selling your lost or stolen property, enter the product info in 
Stolen911.com's Craigslist searcher. Enter a make and model in the 
service's custom Google search box and it scans the Craigslist for-sale 
listings for matching items. A benefit of Stolen911.com's custom search 
is that it scans ads in all geographic locations, not just in your 
vicinity.
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After
 you register with the free site, you can list the items
 you've lost to have them added to Google search results. (The service 
appears to be preparing a premium version that promises more prominent 
placement in search engines and the ability to add more 
attention-getting elements to your listings.)
Long
 before there was Craigslist or any other second-hand online emporium, 
there were pawn shops. Pawn-shop operators are usually adept at spotting
 stolen merchandise someone tries to pawn by using stolen-property 
tracking services such as those described above.
There's
 still a chance your misplaced valuables could wind up hocked by the 
thief or finder. Pawn shops generally don't display items right away and
 instead wait a certain period before offering them for sale. After all,
 the products are technically on loan and redeemable by repaying the 
"loan."
If you make the
 rounds of local pawn shops and spot what may be one of your 
possessions, it may not be a good idea to stake your claim to the item 
right away. On the InfoBarrel site, Harold J. Forbes recommends that you
 act interested in the property, ask the shop to hold it for you, and 
then contact the police -- with your police report in hand -- to ask for
 their assistance in retrieving the merchandise.
According
 to Forbes, the item will then be impounded by the police as evidence. 
You'll have to prove you own it in a court property hearing, and only 
then will you be able to claim it from the police impound.
ID thieves who upload images they took with your lost or stolen camera
The
 metadata attached to many digital images includes serial number data 
stored in Exchangeable Image Format (EXIF) tags. The CameraTrace service
 scans images that have been uploaded to popular photo-sharing sites and
 matches them to its camera database, which the service claims has more 
than 11 million cameras, and counting.
CameraTrace
 promises to work with local law enforcement agencies to help you 
retrieve your lost or stolen camera. It can also be used to enforce 
image copyrights. Note that the service works only with cameras that 
embed their serial numbers in the EXIF tags. It offers one free scan and
 charges $10 per camera thereafter.
Locating
 a lost or stolen camera with the free StolenCameraFinder open-source 
service is a drag-and-drop affair: drag a photo you've taken with the 
camera into your browser and drop it in a box on the site's home page. 
You can also select an image in Windows Explorer or Finder.
StolenCameraFinder's
 drag-and-drop image-tracing service
Find
 a lost or stolen camera by tracing it based on its image fingerprint to
 other photos the theft/finder has posted on the Web.
(Credit: Screenshot by Dennis O'Reilly/CNET)
If
 you don't have a photo taken by the camera, search for its posted 
images by entering the camera's serial number. StolenCameraFinder 
doesn't support images taken with iPhones or other smartphones. The 
service works only with JPEGs, ideally ones that haven't been edited or 
downloaded from the Web, both of which can alter the image's EXIF data. 
Also, Facebook strips out the EXIF data from images uploaded to the 
site, according to StolenCameraFinder.
Here's looking up your old IP address
If
 your lost or stolen
 computer, tablet, or phone is set to sign into your Dropbox or Gmail 
account automatically, or if the thief or finder signs into the account,
 you can identify the person by logging into either service and 
accessing the IP address of the most recent access.
As
 Ben Popken reported in the Consumerist back in March 2011, a Dropbox 
user signed into his account from another computer after his laptop was 
stolen and realized the thief's IP address was captured by the service 
when the crook powered up the laptop. The victim provided the police 
with the IP address, which can be used to identify the perpetrator 
through his or her Internet service provider.
Dropbox most-recent-activity popup
Find the IP address used the last time your Dropbox account was accessed via the account's security settings.
(Credit: Screenshot by Dennis O'Reilly/CNET)
To
 access your recently used IP addresses in Dropbox, sign into the 
account at Dropbox.com, choose the account name in the top-right corner,
 and click Settings. Select the Security tab and look for "Most recent 
activity" in the "Web sessions" section. Hover over the entry to have 
the date, time, and IP address appear in a popup window.
The
 same goes for Gmail: if the person who absconded with your computer or 
device signs into your Gmail account or it's set to start with the 
computer, you can view the IP address used to log in by opening your 
Gmail account from another computer or device, scrolling to the bottom 
of the page, and choosing Details under "Last account activity" in the 
bottom-right corner.
Gmail account access activity
 log
Find a log of your Gmail account accesses by clicking Details under "Last account activity" at the bottom of the main window.
(Credit: Screenshot by Dennis O'Reilly/CNET)
The
 Gmail activity log shows the browser or device used, the location and 
IP address, and the date and time. The log also indicates whether there 
are other active sessions for the account and provides a button for 
signing out of all other sessions.
Take the IP address and your police report to your local police station and ask for their help in retrieving your property.
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