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If you lose your cellphone, don't blame Wayne Dobson - News - ReviewJournal.com
I would be totally whizzed off.
I would be totally whizzed off.
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No kidding. And--other than moving--what can he do?If you lose your cellphone, don't blame Wayne Dobson - News - ReviewJournal.com
I would be totally whizzed off.


He can keep detailed records of every incident, and hire a lawyer to sue all involved parties every time it happens. Before long he'd win enough money to be able to move to a nicer place than North Las Vegas.No kidding. And--other than moving--what can he do?![]()
But who are "the involved parties" you're referring to? Not the individuals, since they're not doing anything wrong. Ditto for the police. With both, they're just following the information they're getting from Sprint, information that they believe to be correct. So, to me, it seems to boil down to Sprint and only Sprint, right?He can keep detailed records of every incident, and hire a lawyer to sue all involved parties every time it happens.
Exactly. Honestly, I'm surprised it HASN'T come to violence already. Until Sprint solves this little problem, he ought to sue them for 24/7 security at his property--I mean like ARMED security, not just an alarm system.I admire him for being so nice about it all, but if he doesn't take measures to stop it, it's only a matter of time before he'll get beaten, shot or worse. He really needs to defend himself.
The last time I checked, trespassing and disturbing the peace are criminal offenses. I'd say that committing a crime is doing something wrong! Even the cops aren't above the law.But who are "the involved parties" you're referring to? Not the individuals, since they're not doing anything wrong. Ditto for the police.
"I'm just following orders" has never been an acceptable excuse for doing something wrong. The same goes for ignorance.With both, they're just following the information they're getting from Sprint, information that they believe to be correct. So, to me, it seems to boil down to Sprint and only Sprint, right?
I don't know what the best security solution for this man is, but since no security company is going to go up against an entire police force, the first thing that must be done is to get the North Las Vegas Police to change their behavior so that they stop treating everything they read on the Internet as the God's honest truth and start taking exceptional measures to protect this man and his home. One great place to start is by declaring his property a "no-go zone" that they're not allowed to enter without his express permission.Honestly, I'm surprised it HASN'T come to violence already. Until Sprint solves this little problem, he ought to sue them for 24/7 security at his property--I mean like ARMED security, not just an alarm system.
Probably Google Maps. I don't know how many "lost phone" apps there are, but I'd bet that none of them use their own geolocation engine.I can't imagine the type of bug that would cause something like that from a programmatic point of view. What service within Sprint is directing all these people to the guy's house?
I wasn't verbose enough.But who are "the involved parties" you're referring to? Not the individuals, since they're not doing anything wrong. Ditto for the police.
The last time I checked, trespassing and disturbing the peace are criminal offenses. I'd say that committing a crime is doing something wrong! Even the cops aren't above the law.
I meant the people who show up and knock on his front door because that's where Sprint directed them for their lost phone. THEY don't know about this glitch. They're just going to the place shown to them as the location of their phone. As for the police, they're now flagging anything involving his address, so at least they're doing something now that they're aware of the problem.So if you lost your phone and your carrier said it's at XYZ location...I don't know, do you have a crystal ball or something?"I'm just following orders" has never been an acceptable excuse for doing something wrong. The same goes for ignorance.With both, they're just following the information they're getting from Sprint, information that they believe to be correct. So, to me, it seems to boil down to Sprint and only Sprint, right?
I don't. Without the knowledge I now have about this glitch, I wouldn't have given any thought to the idea that the info might be incorrect. It's not a matter of ignorance, it's a matter of expecting data like that to be correct.I wholeheartedly agree.The civilians who decide to take the law into their own hands and terrorize an innocent person in the middle of the night aren't using good judgment, and are culpable for those actions. The City of North Las Vegas has a responsibility to interpret tracking data responsibly, and not use GPS as a crutch. They're supposed to know the difference between using GPS and the less precise triangulation, and take that into account when making decisions. They're supposed to learn from past mistakes and not repeat them. Above all, they're supposed to live by the Constitution's directive of presumed innocence. When they don't do this, they are indeed culpable.
But armed security WOULD be able to deal with individuals coming to his property, and it's the irate individuals who pose a threat to his safety.I don't know what the best security solution for this man is, but since no security company is going to go up against an entire police forceHonestly, I'm surprised it HASN'T come to violence already. Until Sprint solves this little problem, he ought to sue them for 24/7 security at his property--I mean like ARMED security, not just an alarm system.