2014 -- S 2897 | |
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LC005084 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2014 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC UTILITIES AND CARRIERS - MOBILE TELEPHONES | |
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Introduced By: Senators Ruggerio, Jabour, Felag, Miller, and Goldin | |
Date Introduced: April 10, 2014 | |
Referred To: Senate Commerce | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Legislative findings. The General Assembly finds and declares all of the |
2 | following: |
3 | (a) According to the Federal Communications Commission, one in three robberies in the |
4 | United States involves the theft of a mobile communications device, making it the number one |
5 | property crime in the country. Many of these robberies often turn violent with some resulting in |
6 | the loss of life. |
7 | (b) Consumer Reports projects that 1.6 million Americans were victimized for their |
8 | smartphones in 2012. |
9 | (c) According to the New York Times, 113 smartphones are lost or stolen every minute in |
10 | the United States. |
11 | (d) According to the Office of the District Attorney for the City and County of San |
12 | Francisco, in 2012, more than 50 percent of all robberies in San Francisco involved the theft of a |
13 | mobile communications device. In New York City, the number was 20 percent, a 40 percent |
14 | increase from the year before. Recently, a half a dozen teenagers beat a 36-year-old New York |
15 | City man for his iPhone. In London, although crime overall is falling, offenses such as |
16 | pickpocketing and bag snatches have risen by more than 15 percent this year. This is mainly |
17 | driven by the theft of phones, with some 10,000 handsets stolen in the city every month. |
18 | (e) In November, 2013, Attorney General Peter Kilmartin signed on as a member of the |
19 | nationwide initiative known as Secure Our Smartphones ("S.O.S") that encourages manufacturers |
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1 | of smartphones to develop a technological means to protect smartphone users in their states by |
2 | drying up secondary markets for stolen devices and eliminate the economic incentive for theft. |
3 | (f) According to press reports, the international trafficking of stolen smartphones by |
4 | organized criminal organizations has grown exponentially in recent years because of how |
5 | profitable the trade has become. |
6 | (g) Replacement of lost and stolen mobile communications devices was an estimated |
7 | thirty billion dollar ($30,000,000,000) business in 2012 according to studies conducted by mobile |
8 | communications security experts. Additionally, industry publications indicate that the four largest |
9 | providers of commercial mobile radio services made an estimated seven billion eight hundred |
10 | million dollars ($7,800,000,000) from theft and loss insurance products in 2013. |
11 | (h) Technological solutions that render stolen mobile communications devices useless |
12 | already exist, but the industry has been slow to adopt them. |
13 | (i) In order to be effective, these technological solutions need to be ubiquitous, as thieves |
14 | cannot distinguish between those mobile communications devices that have the solutions enabled |
15 | and those that do not. As a result, the technological solution should be able to withstand a hard |
16 | reset or operating system downgrade, and be enabled by default, with consumers being given the |
17 | option to affirmatively elect to disable this protection. |
18 | (j) Manufactures of advanced mobile communications devices and commercial mobile |
19 | radio service providers have a responsibility to ensure their customers are not targeted as a result |
20 | of purchasing their products and services. |
21 | (k) It is the intent of the general assembly to require all smartphones and other advanced |
22 | mobile communications devices offered for sale in Rhode Island to come with a technological |
23 | solution enabled, in order to deter theft and protect consumers. |
24 | (l) It is the further intent of the general assembly to prohibit any term or condition in a |
25 | service contract between a customer and a commercial mobile radio service provider that requires |
26 | or encourages the customer to disable the technological solution that renders the customer's |
27 | smartphone or other advanced communications device useless if stolen. |
28 | SECTION 2. Chapter 39-29 of the General Laws entitled "Wireless Telephone |
29 | Regulatory Modernization Act" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
30 | 39-29-7. Sale of advanced mobile communication devices - Hard reset required. -- |
31 | (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the following meanings: |
32 | (1) "Advanced mobile communications device" means an electronic device that is |
33 | regularly hand held when operated that enables the user to engage in voice communications using |
34 | mobile telephony service, Voice over Internet Protocol, or Internet Protocol enabled service, as |
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1 | those terms are defined in ยง 39-28-2, and to connect to the Internet, and includes what are |
2 | commonly known as smartphones and tablets. |
3 | (2) "Commercial mobile radio service" means "commercial mobile service," as defined in |
4 | subsection (d) of Section 332 of Title 47 of the United States Code and as further specified by the |
5 | Federal Communications Commission in Parts 20, 22, 24, and 25 of Title 47 of the Code of |
6 | Federal Regulations. |
7 | (3) "Essential features" of an advanced mobile communications device include the ability |
8 | to use the device for voice communications and the ability to connect to the Internet, including |
9 | the ability to access and use mobile software applications commonly known as "apps." |
10 | (4) "Hard reset" means the restoration of an advanced mobile communications device to |
11 | the state it was in when it left the factory, and refers to any act of returning a device to that state, |
12 | including processes commonly termed a factory reset or master reset. |
13 | (5) "Sold in Rhode Island" means that the advanced mobile communications device is |
14 | sold at retail, and not for resale, from a location within the state, or the advanced mobile |
15 | communications device is sold and shipped to an end-use consumer at an address within the state. |
16 | (b)(1) Any advanced mobile communications device that is sold in Rhode Island on or |
17 | after January 1, 2015, shall include a technological solution that can render the essential features |
18 | of the device inoperable when the device is not in the possession of the rightful owner. A |
19 | technological solution may consist of software, hardware, or a combination of both software and |
20 | hardware, but shall be able to withstand a hard reset. No advanced mobile communications device |
21 | may be sold in Rhode Island without the technological solution enabled. |
22 | (2) The rightful owner of an advanced mobile communications device may affirmatively |
23 | elect to disable the technological solution after sale; however, the physical acts necessary to |
24 | disable the technological solution may only be performed by the end-use consumer or a person |
25 | specifically selected by the end-use consumer to disable the technological solution and shall not |
26 | be physically performed by any retail seller of the advanced mobile communications device. |
27 | (c) A provider of commercial mobile radio service shall not include a term or condition in |
28 | a service contract with an end-use consumer with an address within the state that requires or |
29 | encourages the consumer or rightful owner to disable the technological solution that renders the |
30 | consumer's smartphone or other advanced communications device useless if stolen. |
31 | (d) A provider of commercial mobile radio service or a person or retail entity selling an |
32 | advanced communications device that is sold in Rhode Island shall not charge any fee for making |
33 | the technological solution available to the end-use consumer. |
34 | (e)(1) A person or retail entity selling an advanced communications device in Rhode |
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1 | Island in violation of subsection (b) of this section shall be subject to a civil penalty of not less |
2 | than five hundred dollars ($500), nor more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500), per |
3 | device sold in Rhode Island. |
4 | (2) A provider of commercial mobile radio service that includes a term or condition in a |
5 | service contract with an end-use consumer with an address within the state in violation of |
6 | subsection (c) of this section shall be subject to a civil penalty of not less than five hundred |
7 | dollars ($500), nor more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500), per service contract |
8 | with an end-use consumer with an address within Rhode Island. |
9 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC005084 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC UTILITIES AND CARRIERS - MOBILE TELEPHONES | |
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1 | This act would require that any advanced mobile communications device (smartphone) |
2 | sold in Rhode Island on or after January 1, 2015, include a technological solution that can render |
3 | the essential features of the device inoperable when the device is stolen. |
4 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC005084 | |
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