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How to protect information on your phone from being stolen

Apr 18, 2016
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Have you ever lost your phone? You probably know someone who has had their digital life taken from them. With our lives constantly on-the-go, and the way we have integrated our smartphones into virtually all of our daily activity, our phones are always out and within arm’s reach of the next opportunistic thief.

In fact, we often make it easy for criminals to steal our iPhone or Android phone — at a restaurant, on the bus, at a coffee shop, at a bar.

Don’t think it can happen to you? Think again!

  • 44 per cent of smartphones were stolen because the owner left it behind in a public setting.
  • 14 per cent were stolen from a car or house that was burglarised.
  • 11 per cent were stolen off the victim’s person: out of their hands, pockets, purses, or bags.

Yikes!

According to Acronis survey conducted with Google, more than 11% of Australians is ready to pay around $500 to get their smartphone back. Well, they are not really paying for a piece of hardware only.

Your smartphone often holds precious data from your daily digital life — emails, contacts, photos, videos, calendars, text messages – and this translates into important personal information, work-related information, contacts, and schedules. There’s a lot at stake!

Here are 3 Easy Steps to Keep Your Digital Life Safe

It starts WHEN you purchase your phone and even BEFORE you start using it.

By following these three simple steps, you can deter a criminal from accessing your data and protect your digital life from theft:

  1. Always password protect your phone

Not protecting your phone with a password is foolhardy. If you don’t password protect your smartphone, anyone can get immediate access to your digital life. Make sure the password is long (6 characters preferred), mixes numbers, letters, and symbols, and is unique. Don’t use obvious passwords. Also be sure that when your phone is not in use, your device locks itself automatically. Today’s iPhones even have Touch ID with fingerprints for added security.

  1. Use a find-my-phone app

When your smartphone is stolen or lost, there are many apps you can use to remotely track, lock, and wipe it before a criminal can access and use sensitive or personal data. However, these apps only work if you set them up beforehand. Apple, Samsung, and Microsoft all offer “find my phone” apps for their smartphones that work well. Third-party vendors offer these apps as well. Simply search online for terms such as “find my iPhone” or “find my Android phone” to see available apps and instructions.

  1. Use a mobile device backup solution

While the first two steps above deter a criminal from accessing your data, this last step — backing up your mobile data — helps you recover your data. A smartphone backup solution, like Acronis True Image, backs up your pictures, videos, contacts, events, reminders, and messages and restores the information to a new device. The first time you back up your smartphone, all of this data is backed up and stored securely in the cloud. After the first full backup, only the changed and newly added data (e.g., new photos, etc.) is backed up. All backups happen in the background and you can choose your backup schedule. You don’t even have to think about it after that!

If a criminal does steal your smartphone, you probably won’t recover the device. However, you can recover all the content on the device and get your on-the-go digital life back quickly and easily with a cloud backup solution – even if your replacement device is a different model or from a different supplier.

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