Amidst the crowning glory of Narendra Modi, the
local papers had space for some little things too…. one was about a
reported kidnap incident ….. there were
reports that a fuel station owner who was reportedly kidnapped by a gang on
Sunday morning, returned home during the wee hours of Monday. He is the son of He is the son of the Edapadi
Panchayat Union Chairman a senior AIADMK
functionary. According to the complaint lodged with the Poolampatti Police,
Shankar, on Sunday, had informed his father that he was on his way to
Jalakandapuram to collect a courier. Madesh received a call on his mobile phone
at 1.30 p.m. and the caller claimed that Shankar was with him. The caller
demanded a ransom of Rs. 2 crore to let Shankar free. Based on the complaint, a
case was registered under Section 364 (A) (kidnapping for ransom) of the Indian
Penal Code and eight special teams were formed to rescue Shankar, who returned home at 4.20 a.m. on Monday. Singam released in 2010 ran packed houses. The action masala film gave a fillip to
Surya’s career – in the film, the villain Mayilvahanan is involved in many
anti-social activities, occupying lands and kidnapping children for ransom is
another. The sequel, Singam II, released in July 2013, was also a high
commercial success.
As you travel in public transport, you see people hooked
to their phone….. in India, it’s its love for large screen devices suited
for multimedia consumption. India
loves to watch movies, TV shows, and music videos on the go and larger the
screen, the better the experience ~ those of us, who are not so great fans of
cinema, end up seeing cricket clips and videos.
Mobile equipments are big market – it is to be seen to be believed the
way people buy and exchange their gadgets ….it is not only the uber-rich India, but even
those with meagre earnings …. People with low income too buy expensive
phones. Every phone must have some good
features – the bigger screen, faster connectivity, good amplifier, micro SD
card with gargantuan storage space……
For the elite, there is iphone, the
smartphone from the stable of Apple. It runs Apple's iOS mobile operating
system. The first generation iPhone was released in June 2007; the most recent
iPhones, the seventh-generation iPhone 5C and iPhone 5S, were introduced in Sept 2013. The user interface is built around
the device's multi-touch screen, including a virtual keyboard. The iPhone has
Wi-Fiand can connect to many different cellular networks. An iPhone can shoot
video, take photos, play music, send and receive email, browse the web, send
texts, GPS navigation, tell jokes, record notes, do mathematical calculations,
and receive visual voicemail. Other functions — video games, reference works,
social networking, etc. — can be enabled by downloading application programs
(‘apps’). ~ and there was the added ‘Security’ …. Users
who set up their new iPhone 5s will be prompted to add a fingerprint for the
Touch ID sensor integrated into the home button. Four more separate
fingerprints, for a total of five, can be added later in the iOS 7 Settings
application, where other changes can be made to enhance security. At around Rs.37,500 officially, the 8GB iPhone 5c
is close to the price of phones such as the Galaxy Note 3 and the LG G2, both
of which trump the iPhone 5c for screen real estate and storage size.
In this modern world, here is something on hijacking – not
physical but on a virtual platform – anyway resulting in loss of money for the
victim. (news credit : smh.com.au) ~ Australian Apple
devices, including the iPhone, are being hijacked by a hacker and held ransom. The report states that owners of Apple devices
across Australia
are having them digitally held for ransom by hackers demanding payment before
they will relinquish control. iPads, iPhone and Mac owners in Queensland,
NSW, Western Australia, South
Australia and Victoria
have reported having their devices held hostage. One iPhone user, a Fairfax
Media employee in Sydney, said she was awoken at 4am on Tuesday to a loud
"lost phone" message that said "Oleg Pliss" had hacked
their phone. She was instructed to send $50 to a PayPal account to have it
unlocked. It is not physical theft of the phone, but hackers gaining access to
the phone, and demanding ransom for having it unlocked …. the poor victim, who
despite having the phone on hand, could not use it without paying the hacker to
have the access to the same.
It is likely hackers are using the unusual
name as a front to get money from people. A real Oleg Pliss is a software
engineer at tech company Oracle. A similar name is listed on LInkedIn as a
banking professional in Ukraine,
while there are others in Russia. Users who have a passcode on their device
appear to be able to unlock it after the hacker has sent them the message
demanding payment, but those who had not set a passcode are unable to.
Away from all the melee, there has been ‘Kidnap
and ransom insurance’ designed to
protect individuals and corporations operating in high-risk areas around the
world. K&R insurance policies typically cover the perils of kidnap,
extortion, wrongful detention, and hijacking. K&R policies are indemnity
policies - they reimburse a loss incurred by the insured. The policies do not
pay ransoms on the behalf of the insured. Typically, the insured must first pay
the ransom, thus incurring the loss, and then seek reimbursement under the
policy ~ and at this juncture these
‘virtual hijack’ of equipments and ransom for their release would be outside
the purview of coverage.
With regards – S. Sampathkumar