Mobile Phone disposal

moulesy replied on 25/10/2016 15:43

Posted on 25/10/2016 15:43

Spurred out of inaction by Mrs M at the weekend, I had a huge clear out of my wardrobe and study. I have about 5 or 6 old mobile phones to get rid of. One of the charity bags which dropped through our door the other day listed them as items they'd accept. Now I've taken the batteries and SIM cards out, but is it safe to just let the phones themselves  go this way? I think I read somewhere that there was still a danger of personal information being accessed from them? Any advice for a copmplete technical ignoramus? Undecided. Use left and right arrows to navigate.

Bakers2 replied on 25/10/2016 16:06

Posted on 25/10/2016 16:06

I'll be interested in advice about this too. We have a few kicking around.  I thought you left the battery in, recoverable bits so I thought, thus why they're happy to accept them. Personally I'd charge them up a bit and remove anything, contact lists, texts etc. Can I add a question too?  Should one put out the chargers too?  if you don't want as spares for other equipment,)


pagan8c replied on 25/10/2016 16:22

Posted on 25/10/2016 16:22

I would also do a factory reset as this removes all stuff you have entered into it like addresses ,photos etc. I just did that with my last mobile phone and sold it to 'Game' and got £95 for it . It was about 3yrs old but a good phone and I had kept it in pristine condition. 

Navigateur replied on 25/10/2016 16:24

Posted on 25/10/2016 16:24

Some phone models are now quite rare and command high prices from collectors so I'm sure your chosen charity shop will get good money for some of them.

Rocky 2 buckets replied on 25/10/2016 19:04

Posted on 25/10/2016 19:04

I passed my iPhone on to a family member. Before I did this I checked online & found a step by step video for factory reset followed by a hard reset. I then researched the resets, they were sound. Try YouTube-'clearing personal info prior to sale of phone'. It puts the phone back to its original state when you bought itHappy

Oneputt replied on 25/10/2016 19:27

Posted on 25/10/2016 19:27

If you saved contact details to the phone and not the SIM card those contacts would still be in situ.  Factory reset is best.

moulesy replied on 25/10/2016 19:57

Posted on 25/10/2016 19:57

Thanks for all the advice. So I'll try the factory resets as suggested and then pass them on.  Have to say, though, that, grateful as the charities might be, these are all pretty basic models - the sort you get free with a 12 month contract - so they're not going to make loads of money from them! Happy

neveramsure replied on 25/10/2016 22:20

Posted on 25/10/2016 22:20

That reminds me,a few years ago a work colleague sold his phone to a friend and forgot to erase the text messages.

One of them was from his wife who had taken delivery of a new settee and text that when he got home from work they could christen it.Embarassed  

SELL replied on 25/10/2016 23:32

Posted on 25/10/2016 23:32

I always save phone numbers etc onto the sim card and not the phone, so once it was changed just had to delete text messages etc.

Kennine replied on 26/10/2016 16:33

Posted on 26/10/2016 16:33

Safest disposal method for old phones is to remove the battery then the sim card.  Then a 2lb hammer to smash whats left of the  phone.  Great fun. 

 Cut up sim card & put in bin   Smashed phone and the battery disposed of in the local council disposal point. 

Perfectly safe and all data secure. 

K

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