 |
24th January 2006 - A camera phone for anyone who fears
being abducted has been devised by Nokia. It pretends
to be off while actually sending an emergency alert,
complete with pictures, sound and GPS location.
|
A recessed panic button triggers a pre-recorded emergency
message when pressed. The phone camera then takes and sends
a series of time-stamped snapshots or video clips to a service
centre or trusted friend, along with any sound picked up by
the microphone. If the phone has a GPS receiver it also stamps
the message with location.
If reception is lost, for instance if an abductor drives
into an underground car park, the phone stores images and
audio in memory and automatically transmits them as soon a
signal is regained.
Transmission can be discrete, with the phone apparently off,
or obvious to warn an abductor that a call for help has been
sent. Once triggered, the emergency call can only be halted
by entering a personal code, so accidental false alarms can
be averted.
Although the patent tactfully does not mention it, the phone
sounds like a excellent covert surveillance tool, too.
Nokia's
Plan
Back
to News Reports
|