Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Android phones have started receiving crucial anti-theft features

Add as a preferred source on Google
Android Theft Detection on Pixel 9.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

At Google I/O earlier this year, a trio of safety features were announced to keep Android devices safe in events like theft, locking the device, and setting up new guardrails so that the phone won’t accept a fresh setup in the hands of a bad actor.

Some of these changes were supposed to arrive in the same window as Android 15’s public release, which is right around the corner. But according to Mishaal Rahman and 9to5Google, they’ve already started appearing to users in the U.S. following a test in Brazil.

Recommended Videos

The first one is Theft Detection Lock. “If a common motion associated with theft is detected, your phone screen quickly locks – which helps keep thieves from easily accessing your data,” says Google. It uses onboard sensors as well as connectivity channels to detect such an event.

Theft Protection for Android smartphones.
Google

Next, we have Offline Device Lock. If a bad actor has stolen your phone and they are trying to keep the phone offline for a prolonged period to avoid any kind of tracking, the screen automatically locks. A similar screen lock protocol will also kick into action when someone is trying multiple authentication attempts to unlock the device.

Finally, we have Remote Lock. In the event that a device is stolen and theft protection is not enabled, users can still lock their device remotely by visiting the Android Find My Device page. Users only need to pass a security check and use the same number that was active on the phone.

Remote Lock feature for Android smartphones.
Google

Once the remote lock has done its job, the stolen device can only be unlocked with the original screen lock method, which could be the user’s biometrics or password. But do keep in mind that for this feature to work, the phone must be online. In case the stolen device is offline, the remote screen lock will kick into action as soon as it comes online.

Theft Detection Lock, Remote Lock, and Offline Device Lock will be available for all Android devices running Android 15 or a later version. So far, it seems the rollout is being done in a phased manner, with users in the U.S. receiving it at the moment.

Digital Trends has tested multiple devices, including the Google Pixel 9 and OnePlus Open, but hasn’t received the feature update yet.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is the Managing Editor at Digital Trends.
Galaxy Z Fold 8: Everything we know about Samsung’s wider and shorter foldable
Samsung's widest Fold yet could finally make book-style foldables feel natural.
Rear camera for selfie on Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7.

For most of its existence, the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold has solved one problem while creating another. The book-style foldable has let buyers carry a tablet-sized screen in their pocket without actually carrying a tablet. But, through no fault of its own, that came at the cost of a cover screen so tall and narrow that using it one-handed felt unnatural and uncomfortable. 

Further, viewing content on the inner screen came with giant black bars at the top and the bottom. Samsung is addressing that with the Galaxy Z Fold 8, which could feature an entirely new form factor. Think shorter, wider, passport-shaped, and a cover screen you can actually type on without contorting your fingers. 

Read more
Google just teased a Pixel 11 feature we have been waiting months to see
Pixel Glow appears beside the cameras in Google’s first Pixel 11 video
Lighting, Appliance, Ceiling Fan

Last week, Google confirmed that its 2026 Made by Google event will take place on August 12. The Pixel 11 series is expected to lead the announcements, alongside the fifth-generation Pixel Watch. Google has now released its first video teaser ahead of the event, and it appears to reveal both the Pixel 11 Pro and the rumored Pixel Glow feature.

What does the teaser reveal?

Read more
OnePlus is leaving the US and a global market exit could follow by 2027, says report
Financial strain and rising component costs are driving OnePlus out of the US and Europe.
OnePlus Nord 6 in hand

If you have been following OnePlus' exit rumors for a while, this news probably feels familiar. Reports about OnePlus scaling back in the US and Europe have surfaced multiple times over the past several months, only for the company to firmly deny them.

Now, Bloomberg reports OnePlus will actually begin ceasing operations in the US and Europe as soon as this week, and this time it looks real. The move is part of a larger restructuring at parent company Oppo, and OnePlus plans to eventually exit the rest of the world, including India, sometime in 2027, though it will remain active in China for now.

Read more