December 2013
I am familiar with the new IMEI blacklist that has recently been rolled out by the national carriers and I support the move as an effort to curb phone theft from consumers. But I have some concerns about potentially massive holes that would allow abuse of the initiative.
As I understand it, if I buy a phone from a carrier and it is subsequently lost or stolen, I can call my carrier and have the IMEI blocked by adding to a blacklist. Further, this blacklist is shared by all of the participating Canadian carriers and by many international carriers, so it will be blocked on those networks too. So far so good.
Now, I have a few additional questions and I'd really appreciate it if someone from Fido could answer each one separately.
The scenarios I am imagining for abuse (and have now read about) are:
I understand that it may be in the interests of the carriers to discourage buying from anyone but their stores, but the fact is that sales to occur outside of the carriers. The answers to these questions is important in order to determine whether the new blacklist is being used or could be used to undermine confidence in buying phones from outside the carriers, which was never the intent of the blacklist proposed by the CRTC.
Thanks very much for any formal answers Fido can provide.
***Edited to add labels***
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April 2016
April 2016
Samantha No, before I purchased the phone I did check if it was blacklisted. And it wasnt!
Thats the whole point.
After 3-4 months of utlisation initial owner reclaimed that it was stolen (!)
and FIDO ignores my ownership for the last few months and taking 1 week of ownership of the initial owner into account !#$%^*
June 2019
Did anything become of this? I bought a brand new sealed iPhone XR and the same thing happened, had it for 3 weeks signed into iCloud and on the Fido network, and as of yesterday afternoon it's been reported as blacklisted. 😠
June 2019
Hey @LG76!
A phone can only be blacklisted if it was used on an account within the last 60 days, so this is definitely odd.
I'll send you a PM so we can take a look at what's going on and try to get to the bottom of things.
October 2019
Is Fido allowed to blacklist my phone at anytime without my permission?
October 2019
Hey @rh8!
We moved your post to the right thread!
Only the owner of the phone can request for their device to be blacklisted once it's lost or stolen.
The initial user has 60 days after his last usage to blacklist the phone.
Hope this answers your question!
November 2020
Hi @FidoVanessa
I've had a similar issue happen to me recently. I purchased a phone 81 days ago, and now it got blacklisted. Is this something that can be reversed? I noticed you mentioned the initial user has 60 days after their last usage to blacklist the phone.
Cheers,
November 2020
Hey @stefanvmourik
That's correct!
You'd need to ask the initial user of the device to remove it from the Blacklist as soon as possible.
I've also replied to your PM, talk soon!
April 2016
January 2014
i was aware of that and the phone got stolen around mid\end november so that’s why i’ve called to have the phone blacklisted. but fido just told me it’s not a fido phone so they can’t do it
are you able to blacklist it? if so please let me know and i’ll give you the phone number that the phone was used so you can check the imei.
dont want the thief getting away with it... at least have the phone turn useless... i had a lot valuable data on that phone and the thief didnt even care
thanks
January 2014
Hi hpl912,
The blacklisting of IMEIs was effective September 30, 2013. After 60 days we are unable to blacklist the IMEI. I must apologize as I think since it was a new policy throughout Canada, the representative might have been not fully aware of the details. Private message me your date of birth / postal code / and the model of phone you were initially using please. I will see what I can do for you!
October 2014
@FidoAmanda wrote:Hi hpl912,
The blacklisting of IMEIs was effective September 30, 2013. After 60 days we are unable to blacklist the IMEI. I must apologize as I think since it was a new policy throughout Canada, the representative might have been not fully aware of the details. Private message me your date of birth / postal code / and the model of phone you were initially using please. I will see what I can do for you!
Hi Amanda, I lost my iphone 5 in Dec 2013 and when I called fido to have it blacklisted, the lady told me fido did not do the blacklisting. Reading your responses now saying that the program was effective Sept 2013 which means it was in place over 2 months before I reported my phone stolen just tells me that I was screwed over by not only the thieves who stole my phone but by the fido rep that lacked training to assist me. It's obviously pass the 60 day mark to do anything about it now.
April 2015
Hello All,
I recently purchased a galaxy s5 and it was reported lost and was blacklisted. I have contacted the owner and he called Koodo to have it removed from the blacklist. He thought he lost his phone some time ago but actually found it in his house somewhere but forgot to call Koodo to report it not lost. Long story short, the phone currently works with Koodo sim card but nothing else even though I unlocked the phone. On the protectyourdata.ca website it shows not report as lost or stolen anymore. I was wondering how often Fido or any carriers update their blacklist so I can start using the phone on Fido.
Thanks!
April 2015
October 2014
Hi I have found an iPhone 5c about 8 months ago. Reported it to the security at the mall it was found, provided my email / phone all my contact info for them, in case someone came looking for their phone. I have called them several time since.... to date, no one has claimed the phone.
Can you locate the owner and provide to them my contact info, so I can then get the phone to them?
Thanks,
December 2013
December 2013
Hi 10yearfido,
If a client claims a new phone for a device protection plan, we do not enforce that he must blacklist the IMEI since it is the client’s choice only that can blacklist it or remove it. If the buyer does black list the phone and sells it to someone then yes he would had committed a fraud to the buyer. It is hard to categorize it as a legitimate purchase because the buyer would be unable to provide additional proof (a receipt or a signed document). If we did accept to intervene in this instance, it would be very difficult for us to differentiate a stolen device, a sold device or an exchanged device amongst users.
For my personal opinion, as buyer, you’d have to make sure the phone is active the moment you use the phone. The IMEI would then be on your Fido account, which allows you to blacklist or have it removed as well. By obtaining more information on the person you are buying from (phone number or email address) will also be important. There is still an uncertain period of 60 days if you choose to make a private purchase. Again, it’s hard to intervene when the transaction is done in private without any documentation or additional legal proof.
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January 2014
what are the options when someone is that exact spot?
January 2014