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I have recently purchased a Blackberry after loosing my beautiful Nokia E71. I have subscribed for Blackberry Internet Service only and don't have enterprise activation. I was contemplating if I could write an application that could turn it into a brick by sending an SMS from another pre-defined number of my friend.

To clarify, my intention isn't to play pranks on anyone. It's purely educational.
Having lost a phone that costs ~$450, I am curious if I could do something that would let me recover the phone or at least make it useless to someone who is in possession. I am wondering how can service provider do it? As I can see RIM APIs only go as far as wiping the data to restore the phone to factory condition. I am asking this because I found an application for Symbian S60 phones that I wished I purchased and installed.
I know and I am capable of developing similar application for Blackberry, but the phone could be wiped clean and re-used. The procedure is much easier and well documented for Blackberry phones in comparison to Nokia phones.

I know this could be done by calling up the operator. But I would like to explore if I could write a program to do that by myself. Ideas are appreciated.

In general, what constitutes turning the phone into a brick, and how can it be done programmatically?

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why would you want to do this? – steven Nov 2 at 5:36
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You could ask someone if they wanted to swap it for a brick. I would. – alex Nov 2 at 5:39
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hi - perhaps you'd want to provide more details on the reason you'd like to do this - err... before you get clamped shut in a box and floated away into oblivion ? :-) – Critical Skill Nov 2 at 5:48
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Even if this is done for security, or to prevent theft - I'm not sure you should write that yourself - how will you debug/test it? Should you even debug a giant bug? – Kobi Nov 2 at 5:49
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This functionality rather may be considered as such, that will prevent hurting someone. Think about аddress book, e-mail, confidential info that may be there inside of your corporate business device in hands of anyone. But still, simple wiping information may be enought. – coldice Nov 2 at 8:48
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closed as blatantly offensive by Ed Swangren, James Black, alex, Michael Petrotta, John Kugelman Nov 2 at 6:17

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