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US cracks down on smartphone theft
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) April 10, 2012


Citing a surge in violent robberies, US authorities and cellphone carriers announced Tuesday an effort to crack down on smartphone theft.

The major carriers and the Federal Communications Commission answered rising pressure from US police departments with a plan for a national database for stolen phones that would prevent their use by new owners.

FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said the four leading carriers had agreed to set up their own databases of stolen phones within six months, and aim for a common registry within 18 months, allowing those who lose their phones to prevent them from ever being used again.

"The numbers are alarming. In Washington DC, New York, and other major cities roughly 40 percent of all robberies now involve cellphones," Genachowski said.

"It endangers the physical safety of people all over the country, as well as the safety of personal information that is on the devices."

The aim is to allow phone users to easily report a stolen phone with carriers that will then refuse to activate it under a new owner -- rendering it unusable and worthless to thieves.

"What we are doing is drying up the market for stolen cellphones... as it has in Europe," said New York City's Police Commissioner Ray Kelly.

Police departments around the country have arrested hundreds of thieves and phone resellers in coordinated crackdowns on theft rings in recent months. Nearly all of the stolen phones, they said, are resold domestically.

But they say that the thefts are still surging and are growing more violent.

"I've got young ladies pushing baby strollers getting their jaws broken for a phone," said Cathy Lanier, Washington's police chief.

Charles Ramsey, Philadelphia's police commissioner, said that in his city: "These devices are being taken at the point of a gun, or they are being taken after a serious assault."

The new registry comes years after similar efforts have been carried out in Australia and Europe.

The London-based GSMA, a global association of more than 800 mobile operators, has also operated a counter-theft database based on phone serial numbers for years.

Christopher Guttman-McCabe of the industry's main trade group, CTIA-The Wireless Association, explained their sluggishness to take action as a consequence of the late rise in phone-related crime in the United States.

Cellphone thefts came much more slowly to the country because US carriers provide phones free or at hefty discounts to entice customers to commit to long-term service plans, he explained.

Genachowski said conversations with GSMA officials and British officials who operate their own registry convinced him the US could do the same.

He said the FCC will eventually push to integrate the US phone list with those of other countries to help stifle international trade in stolen phones.

"These are steps that will reduce the value of stolen smartphones and tablets," he said.

"We have called on all countries to adopt this database."

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Disney to develop animation productions in China
Shanghai (AFP) April 10, 2012 - The Walt Disney Co., which is building a theme park in China, said Tuesday it had joined an initiative to develop Chinese animation productions.

The US entertainment giant and the state-backed China Animation Group have launched a project to develop animation content for the Chinese and other markets, Disney said in a statement.

Chinese Internet giant Tencent would help market the productions, to be developed for television, film and digital platforms, it said.

"Disney's involvement builds on our expertise and long term commitment to nurture the local original animation industry," Andy Bird, chairman of Walt Disney International, said in the statement.

"We look forward to working with China Animation Group and Tencent in taking Chinese stories to China and the world," he said.

China Animation Group operates under the government's Ministry of Culture.

Disney will provide expertise for story writing, screening and market research to create content to an international standard, the statement said.

China has been seeking to build up its domestic animation industry with mixed results.

While local productions have found an audience, movies such as the successful "Kung Fu Panda" series produced by US film giant DreamWorks Animation have sparked soul-searching over why China is not more competitive.

DreamWorks Animation itself announced a Chinese joint venture to make films for the domestic market in February, when China's Vice President Xi Jinping travelled to Los Angeles while on an official visit to the United States.

Disney broke ground on a long-awaited theme park in China's commercial hub of Shanghai in April, 2011, which will be its third park in Asia after Tokyo and Hong Kong -- a semi-autonomous region of China.

The first-phase of the $3.7 billion Shanghai park is scheduled to open in 2015, the official Shanghai Daily newspaper said.



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