BILL NUMBER: SB 962 AMENDED
BILL TEXT
AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 5, 2014
AMENDED IN SENATE APRIL 9, 2014
AMENDED IN SENATE MARCH 24, 2014
INTRODUCED BY Senator Leno
(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Skinner)
(Coauthors: Senators Hancock, Pavley, and Wolk)
FEBRUARY 6, 2014
An act to add Section 22761 to the Business and Professions Code,
relating to mobile communications devices.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 962, as amended, Leno. Advanced mobile communications devices.
Existing law regulates various business activities and practices,
including the sale of telephones.
This bill would require that any advanced mobile communications
device, as defined commonly known as a
smartphone , that is manufactured and sold in
California on or after January July 1,
2015, include a technological solution, which may consist of
software, hardware, or both software and hardware, that can render
inoperable the essential features of the device, as defined, to
an unauthorized user when the device is not in the possession
of the rightful owner. The bill would require that the technological
solution be able to withstand a hard reset, as defined, and when
enabled, prevent reactivation of the device on a wireless network
except by the rightful owner or his or her authorized designee. The
bill would make these requirements inapplicable when the device is
resold in California on the secondhand market or is consigned and
held as collateral on a loan. The bill would prohibit the sale of an
advanced mobile communications device in California without
the technological solution being enabled, but unless,
during the activation and registration process, the device's default
setting prompts the user to enable the technological solution. The
bill would authorize the rightful owner to affirmatively elect
to disable the technological solution after sale.
at the point of sale, during the activation and registration
process, or anytime thereafter. The bill would make a violation
of the bill's requirements subject to a civil penalty of not less
than $500, nor more than $2,500, for each violation.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no.
State-mandated local program: no.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
(a) According to the Federal Communications Commission, smartphone
thefts now account for 30 to 40 percent of robberies in many major
cities across the country. Many of these robberies often turn violent
with some resulting in the loss of life.
(b) Consumer Reports projects that 1.6 million Americans were
victimized for their smartphones in 2012.
(c) According to the New York Times, 113 smartphones are lost or
stolen every minute in the United States.
(d) According to the Office of the District Attorney for the City
and County of San Francisco, in 2012, more than 50 percent of all
robberies in San Francisco involved the theft of a mobile
communications device.
(e) Thefts of smartphones in Los Angeles increased 12 percent in
2012, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.
(f) According to press reports, the international trafficking of
stolen smartphones by organized criminal organizations has grown
exponentially in recent years because of how profitable the trade has
become.
(g) Replacement of lost and stolen mobile communications devices
was an estimated thirty-billion-dollar ($30,000,000,000) business in
2012 according to studies conducted by mobile communications security
experts. Additionally, industry publications indicate that the four
largest providers of commercial mobile radio services made an
estimated seven billion eight hundred million dollars
($7,800,000,000) from theft and loss insurance products in 2013.
(h) Technological solutions that render stolen mobile
communications devices useless already exist, but the industry has
been slow to adopt them.
(i) In order to be effective, these technological solutions need
to be ubiquitous, as thieves cannot distinguish between those mobile
communications devices that have the solutions enabled and those that
do not. As a result, the technological solution should be able to
withstand a hard reset or operating system downgrade, and be enabled
by default, with consumers being given the option to affirmatively
elect to disable this protection.
(j) Manufactures of advanced mobile communications devices and
commercial mobile radio service providers have a responsibility to
ensure their customers are not targeted as a result of purchasing
their products and services.
(k) It is the intent of the Legislature to require all smartphones
and other advanced mobile communications devices
offered for sale in California to come with a technological solution
enabled, in order to deter theft and protect consumers.
SEC. 2. Section 22761 is added to the Business and Professions
Code, to read:
22761. (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms have
the following meanings:
(1) "Advanced mobile communications device" means an electronic
device that is regularly hand held when operated that enables the
user to engage in voice communications using mobile telephony
service, Voice over Internet Protocol, or Internet Protocol enabled
service, as those terms are defined in Sections 224.4 and 239 of the
Public Utilities Code, and to connect to the Internet, and
includes what and is limited to what are
commonly known as smartphones and tablets.
smartphones.
(2) "Commercial mobile radio service" means "commercial mobile
service," as defined in subsection (d) of Section 332 of Title 47 of
the United States Code and as further specified by the Federal
Communications Commission in Parts 20, 22, 24, and 25 of Title 47 of
the Code of Federal Regulations, and includes "mobile satellite
telephone service" and "mobile telephony service," as those terms are
defined in Section 224.4 of the Public Utilities Code.
(3) "Essential features" of an advanced mobile communications
device include the ability to use the device for voice communications
and the ability to connect to browse
the Internet, including the ability to access and use mobile software
applications commonly known as "apps." "Essential features"
does not include any functionality needed for the operation of the
technological solution.
(4) "Hard reset" means the restoration of an advanced mobile
communications device to the state it was in when it left the
factory, and refers to any act of returning a device to that state,
including processes commonly termed a factory reset or master reset.
(5) "Sold in California" means that the advanced mobile
communications device is sold at retail from a location within the
state, or the advanced mobile communications device is sold and
shipped to an end-use consumer at an address within the state. "Sold
in California" does not include a device that is resold in the state
on the secondhand market or that is consigned and held as collateral
on a loan.
(b) (1) Any advanced mobile communications device that is
manufactured and sold in California on or after
January July 1, 2015, shall include a
technological solution that can render the essential features of the
device inoperable to an unauthorized user when the device
is not in the possession of the rightful owner. The technological
solution shall be reversible, so that if the rightful owner obtains
possession of the device after the essential features of the device
have been rendered inoperable, the operation of those essential
features can be restored by the rightful owner or his or her
authorized designee. A technological solution may consist of
software, hardware, or a combination of both software and hardware,
but shall be able to withstand a hard reset, and when enabled, shall
prevent reactivation of the device on a wireless network except by
the rightful owner or his or her authorized designee. No advanced
mobile communications device may be sold in California
without the technological solution enabled. unless,
during the activation and registration process, the device's default
setting prompts the user to enable the technological solution.
(2) The "essential features" that are required to be rendered
inoperable pursuant to this subdivision do not include the ability of
a device to access emergency services by a voice call or text to the
numerals "911" and the ability of a device to receive wireless
emergency alerts and warnings.
(3) The rightful owner of an advanced mobile communications device
may affirmatively elect to disable the technological solution
after sale. at the point of sale, during the
activation and registration process, or anytime thereafter.
However, the physical acts necessary to disable the technological
solution may only be performed by the end-use consumer or a person
specifically selected by the end-use consumer to disable the
technological solution and shall not be physically performed
by any retail seller of the advanced mobile communications device.
solution.
(c) A person or retail entity selling an advanced communications
device in California in violation of subdivision (b) shall be subject
to a civil penalty of not less than five hundred dollars ($500), nor
more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500), per device
sold in California.
(d) Any request by a government agency to interrupt communications
service utilizing a technological solution required by this section
is subject to Section 7908 of the Public Utilities Code.
(e) Nothing in this section requires a technological solution that
is incompatible with, or renders it impossible to comply with,
obligations under state and federal law and regulation related to any
of the following:
(1) The provision of emergency services through the 911 system,
including text to 911, bounce-back messages, and location accuracy
requirements.
(2) Participation in the wireless emergency alert system.
(3) Participation in state and local emergency alert and public
safety warning systems.