NEW DELHI: Mobile phones which do not have a unique identity number
may soon go out of circulation. The Department of Telecom (DoT) is
planning to block cellphones which do not bear the International
Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) number.

Many handsets assembled locally or imported from China do not have
IMEI numbers. The DoT has also proposed a bar on all mobile phones
with IMEI numbers bearing all zeroes or no zeroes. IMEI numbers can be
checked by dialing "*#06#" in any keypad.

Investigations into the recent serial blasts revealed that mobile
phones used by terrorists did not bear valid IMEI numbers. If they had
valid numbers, the phones could have been tracked from their origin to
the point of purchase.

It is estimated that there about 1.6 crore handsets in India which do
not have valid IMEI numbers, which is a unique 14-digit number used to
identify valid devices. If the DoT move goes through, mobile operators
will snap services to these phones.

Chinese handsets account for about 13.3%, or Rs 4,000 crore, of
India’s total mobile market, which is about Rs 30,000 crore a year.

Every month, about 16.8 lakh Chinese and locally-assembled handsets
are sold in India. A GPRS-enabled Chinese handset costs about Rs
3,500, against at least Rs 5,000 for a similar branded phone.

According to Indian Cellular Association (ICA) president Pankaj
Mohindroo, at least one crore users will be affected if the calls are
barred. Many local dealers circumvent the limitation by offering to
change the IMEI number if it is all zeroes, or add a zero if it
doesn’t have one. Change of IMEI is not legal in India, unlike in the
US and the UK.

Enterprising customers can also change the IMEI number with free
software available on the web. The DoT note does not address these
issues.

Many sellers of stolen handsets too attempt to change the IMEI
numbers. This is done to ensure that a telecom operator is unable to
lock the phone and the SIM card once the original owner reports the
theft.

Mobile operators usually store IMEI numbers of stolen mobiles in an
Equipment Identity Register. Changing the number ensures that the
stolen mobile can continue to be in circulation.

Branded mobile phone makers have welcomed the DoT move. Said Nokia’s
director for corporate affairs Ambrish Bakaya, “It will definitely
have a negative impact on the Chinese phone market. It will encourage
people to shift to branded handsets. It’s a very positive step for us
and I am sure DoT will take care of the loopholes.” ICA said it is
working on a solution that can take care of the loophole and identify
fake IMEI numbers.

“From the national security point of view, it is a crucial step and it
will also discourage consumers from using handsets with illegal IMEI
numbers,” said Samsung Mobile Businesses country head Sunil Dutt. All
users would do well to check if they have a valid IMEI number.

N.Sukumar
Research Analyst
www.kences1.blogspot.com
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Kences1" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/kences1?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to