The last thing you want to encounter after a long, fun night out is an empty pocket where there should’ve been your iPhone. As you log into your computer to try and track it down, you find yourself getting locked out of all of your various accounts. It’s a slippery slope that a good number of people have slid down before and it’s all because a tricky someone (or some tricky people) was able to peek at your passcode and then snatch your precious device. And all of this happens more often than you’d probably think.

The bad news is that Apple can’t do anything to prevent your phone from being stolen. The good news is that if your phone does get stolen, you may be able to benefit from a new feature, currently headed into public testing, that Apple has dubbed Stolen Device Protection. Here’s what you need to know and how you might be able to test it for yourself.

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Stolen Device Protection availability

Supported devices include every device in the primary iPhone series from the iPhone X onward and the iPhone SE 2nd generation or later.

What Stolen Device Protection does

Essentially, SDP adds heftier barriers to areas of credentialed access on your iPhone or iPad where if you couldn’t put in your Apple ID information, you would be able to get in by entering your passcode (which a malicious actor already knows). Such areas include the ability to change your Apple ID password, looking at passwords stored in iCloud Keychain, disabling Find My device tracking, and others.

How to find your lost iPhone, AirPods, or Watch with the Find My app

The Find My app allows Apple users to locate their iPhone, Watch, AirPods, iPad, Mac, and some third-party devices. Here’s how to use it.

With SDP on, if a device is determined to be away from home, work, or another familiar location, access to many of these toggles will now require either Face ID or Touch ID authentication. Furthermore, some especially sensitive toggles will require the hacker to wait an hour after successful authentication before they can start changing those settings. Passcodes will no longer be offered as a fallback method of authentication.

Airtag in Findmy app with battery percentage

Stolen Device Protection won’t require biometric authentication for most other areas that don’t require further credentialing.

What Stolen Device Protection will require for access

When Stolen Device Protection is turned on and your iPhone or iPad is in an unfamiliar location, here are the features that will now require Face ID or Touch ID authentication for access:

Features that require an hour’s wait after successful biometric authentication:

How to set up Find My Friends and track an iPhone

Apple’s Find My app enables you to track the location of your friends. Here’s how to set it up, track a friend’s iPhone and some extra tips.

Additionally,Stern has also done excellent work covering iPhone theftand profiling victims who have lost access to their digital (and tied-up financial) lives because con artists were able to glean device passcodes and then steal their phones. This feature should go a long way towards stopping major bleeding in most cases.

Apple Wallet’s hotel keycard support is now live, starting at Hyatt hotels photo 1

In the meantime, Stern and the Pocket-lint team, recommend choosing passwords stronger than just the default 4-character pin and opting for a custom alphanumeric instead.

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