Mobile phone stolen with avast account from daugther in law..

Hi, yesterday (01-09) my wife’s bicyle is stolen and with that her mobile phone and key’s. She recently traded her phone, a iphone for a htc desire which had avast security on it, the minute she put her sim card in the htc the thing began to alarm that it was stolen she contacted her father for the pincode and the alarm was reset and al was oke. But we never changed the account to ours so now it’s stolen and we want to track the telephone, is there a way to track it by telephone number? or any other way? thanks in advance Peter.

Yes, you can control it via SMS commands.
http://www.avast.com/free-mobile-security#tab3

Dear Customer!

In order to track your phone you should start by contacting the person (friend/family member) who’s phone number is set as “friend” number in Anti-Theft.
If a thief/finder turns on the phone and changes the SIM card, our app will send a SMS with the current location of the phone and the new phone number (as sending phone number) to this “friend”.

If the friend hasn’t received a SMS, it’s most likely that the original SIM card is still in place.

To locate the phone, you send a SMS to the phone with this content

2222 locate

replace 2222 with own avast! PIN - it’s 4-6 digits, only numbers.

There are many SMS commands available that might prove helpful. For example:

GET LOG
Sample: 2222 GET LOG 10
Gets the call and SMS log (you see whom the thief called and who called him)

All SMS commands, along with a short description how everything works is explained in our manual available at:
http://files.avast.com/files/documentation/mobile-security-user-guide-en.pdf
it’s short and easy to understand.

Of course you can also use our online interface at my.avast.com to communicate with the anti-theft installation - provided that the app was paired with the online account. The upside of the online portal is, that it’s convenient. The upside of SMS commands is, that they are more reliable and will work even without internet connection (which might be relevant if the thief changes the SIM to a prepaied non-internet SIM card)

Regards,
Werner