Saturday, May 10, 2014

The Secured Connection

In April 2007, I was back to my posting station Mumbai from a long outing to a closed city somewhere near the North Pole. The chilled out trip from -20 to the windy and pleasant Mumbai was great and I was looking forward to catch up on the lost time with family. Just before I had left Mumbai, I had bought a second hand Sony Ericcson Mobile phone. This was my first Camera Phone and could do emails too. However, I realized that its battery was not holding for a longer duration and so I bought a trusted new Nokia with a Camera and Email capability and left the Sony Ericcson with my better half at Mumbai. On my return to Mumbai all was checked correct.
 My in- Laws had reached Mumbai before I left for Mumbai to be with my family and there were a few medical issues which we were grappling with for my Mom-in-Law. On my return to Mumbai, we went to Khar to meet a faith healer by the name of Munir Khan to take a medicine from him. The meeting with Munir Khan was pleasant and we came out happy. We thought of enjoying a family lunch at a local restaurant in Khar as it was lunch time. We entered a restaurant and ordered our lunch and some beer. A few college boys were sitting on an adjoining table and were having a smoke inside the AC premises. I just walked up to them and requested them to stop smoking as my Mom-in-Law was not feeling quite well. The boys obliged smilingly and as a gesture of thanks, I gifted them with a Cigar which I had brought from my foreign trip. We had our lunch and set off for Colaba- Navy Nagar.
           
Within first 5 minutes of the drive, my Brother-in-Law who was holding the Sony phone realized that the phone has been left behind at the hotel. I turned the car around and reached the restaurant. The manager completely denied that we had left the phone behind and so did the staff which had served us. He offered to help us and sent a boy to trace the students (they were regulars in that place). This help also came back empty handed. I spoke to a Navy Police Officer who was handling the security of a Navy establishment at Malad and even he said that it was a gone case. Leaving my contact details with the Manager, we set off for Colaba. At Mahim, I gave a call on the Sony Mobile and the bell rang but no one answered the phone. At the red light, I sent in a sms to the number and requested for posting the Sim number on my address as it contained vital contact informations. The sms was delivered. Soon the phone got switched off and no contact was possible.
          
The loss of a Mobile is distressing and the information it carries along with it can be a colossal loss. I got up early the next day (Sunday) and rang the number. The phone was switched off. I got ready and went to the Colaba Police Stn to register a FIR. With the copy of FIR, I went to collect a new SIM from the phone provider's office. Seeing my Navy Sea Cap, the agent offered me a seat and in the course of discussions he stated that his father too had worked for the Indian Navy. I told him about the loss of phone and that I could ring the bell and deliver a sms before the phone went dead. He said he could help and soon came with the call records of the last day. It was a eureka moment as now I had 04 Mobile numbers which were dialed from the phone when it was lost. Bravo, I complimented the agent and thanked the Indian Navy.
         
I got back to my home and dialed the first number. The call went to a carpenter from UP in Ooty. He feigned ignorance about whom he had spoken to from my number. The next call was not answered as the phone was switched off. The third call went to a Taxi Driver in Bhandup and he out-rightly told me to do whatever I could but I will not get the phone back. Decency is not a good trait especially when you are separated by air waves. My mind changed the tack and the actor inside me took over the next call. My Father-in- Law was interestingly watching my actions. The next call went to another carpenter in Bandra and I latched on. I introduced myself as ACP Shinde from Khar Police Station and promised that if the phone was not returned then I would have to be really strict in my actions and round up the Carpenter and his family/room mates. I thundered that you have stolen the phone of a important politician from the local set up and it was his son's phone. I added that I am about to retire and the phone should be returned otherwise the 3rd degree methods would have to be adopted. The carpenter on the other side of the phone was by now in his elements and challenged my claims. Raising my voice, I shouted in Marathi," Eh Ganpatla, Gaadi nikal, inka kholi mein jaao aur round up kar ke abhisch lao." My Father-in-Law was zapped at the change of my voice. The Carpenter was now on the receiving side. I told him that his position has been marked through this call and he cannot escape the long hands of ACP Shinde.
          
 He said, he needed time and I gave him 20 minutes to give me a call back. I opened my Beer and we waited. At the stroke of the 15th minute my mobile rang and it was the Carpenter on the other side. He said that the person who had picked up my phone was dead scared and had lost the SIM Card which was thrown into Khar sea. They were willing to return the hand set and wanted my team to pick it up from an abandoned pipe line behind a Bandra hospital. Now it was my turn to get lost as I was not very well aware of the Mumbai geography and surely this hospital was nowhere in my horizon. I just memorized the details and we agreed to meet at 1600 hrs to pick the phone. In return the Carpenter pleaded that they should not be touched to which I reluctantly agreed in-spite of the fact that they had lost the SIM and the local politician would not be very amused by the fact.
Next I called my Navy Police friend and he was aghast that a phone was on its way to recovery. His men knew the area and he sent his team to pick the phone. The team came back with the phone from the abandoned pipe line behind the hospital. The phone was intact but of course with the SIM Card missing. It was a miraculous retrieval and my Father-in-Law still enacts the act of ACP Shinde and Havaldar Ganpat Kamble.
 
Today we are privileged to have phones with Trackers and pass words. Keep the password switched on and make it as robust as possible. Always activate the tracker as any change of SIM would be immediately reported on the alternate mobile number. The smart phone can even be made dead using remote internet techniques. We are moving towards an over-cautious but secured connections world. The data syncing keeps the contacts on a cloud data base and even a lost phone data can be instantly recovered by another smart phone. Of course, only the pocket feels a bit lighter. It is also true that one man's delight becomes another man's security concern as free App services communicate free bytes instantly. These services are meant to connect us. Can we stop someone from sending a data? Can we stop our habit of forwarding from our devices? Its now an itch and the fingers feel stiff if we do not forward a few things in a day. All that we must ensure is- Live and Let Live. Indians are the second largest population on this planet and even if some one decides to snoop on all our acts then he has to invest a lot of currency and also employ highly trained manpower. Do they have such resources? All that we must ensure is a secured connection. Keep life simple. Read and watch what we get and forward we must what is relevant. A vibrant and chirping India on smart connections is the new Psyops avatar for snooping enemies. So keep texting and keep smiling. After all, you need to connect with people, your children, your spouse, your relatives it you have to survive in these "Link Up" times.

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