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- From: mrc@Tomobiki-Cho.CAC.Washington.EDU (Mark Crispin)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.next.misc
- Subject: protecting your NeXT from being stolen
- Message-ID: <MS-C.721363072.1103527590.mrc@Tomobiki-Cho.CAC.Washington.EDU>
- Date: 10 Nov 92 02:37:52 GMT
- Article-I.D.: Tomobiki.MS-C.721363072.1103527590.mrc
- Sender: news@u.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: University of Washington
- Lines: 50
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
- Mime-Version: 1.0
-
- This should be obvious, but it is truly amazing how many people don't
- do it: when you buy any piece of expensive equipment, *always* mark it
- as your property, in a PROMINENT place and in a PERMANENT fashion.
- Also, mark it again, in a less-obvious place.
-
- This serves two purposes: prevention of theft, and assistance to
- police in recovery of stolen objects. Items which are obviously
- engraved in an indelible fashion are significantly less valuable to a
- thief.
-
- This is especially important with laptops and notebooks, which are
- stolen far more often than desktop machines.
-
- The best form of marking is deep engraving into the case of the
- object. Engrave each and every separable object, including the
- keyboard and mouse. Engraving tools for the purpose are readily
- available for purchase; also, police departments will loan you the
- tools (or engrave items you bring in) -- and give you window stickers
- to notify thieves that your property is marked.
-
- Spray painting and gummed tags can be removed with enough effort.
- Anyone who buys equipment from a university surplus property
- department on a regular basis is well familiar with that.
-
- Careful research has conclusively proven that the performance of a
- NeXT is in no way affected by having engravings made into the case.
- Sorry if it offends your sense of esthetics to have the `insanely
- great' black case marred by engraving, but I think you'll be more
- offended if your machine is stolen. One particularly effective
- marking I saw once was *BRANDING* into the case. You couldn't help
- but notice it. At a campus where computer theft was endemic, no
- branded machines ever got ripped off.
-
- I have also determined that engraving does not significantly affect
- the resale value of the equipment. I have sold quite a bit of
- engraved equipment that I have used and retired over the years without
- hassle. All you need to do is draw up a bill of sale transferring
- title to the new owner.
-
- At the minimum, you should engrave your name and driver's license
- number including the issuing state or province. Yes, your *driver's
- license number*, not your Social Security number. A driver's license
- number is the one thing that even a cop in Lower Podunk can use to
- track you down. Often, they can do it from their squad car. I
- believe you can have your report of stolen property noted on your
- driving record, so when the cop in Lower Podunk he'll see the report.
-
- Thieves know this, and avoid marked property. This won't prevent
- theft entirely, but if there are easier pickings elsewhere the thief
- will go there and leave you alone.
-