It happens: you lose your phone, freak out because there’s a ton of personal information in it. You go to Android Device Manager (aka ADM), lock your phone with a temporary password and ask ADM for a remote wipe.
Later, it turns out that the phone was just misplaced and out of battery. If you turn it on, it should be wiped right away.
The thing is: once the remote wipe has been requested, there is no way to prevent the command from being SENT (save time, don’t search further), but you prevent the command from being RECEIVED (and executed).
If you follow these simple steps, you may just save yourself a lot of troubles (more details below, I’d advise reading the article):
A remote wipe command will wipe a phone immediately if there’s network connectivity on the device (and enough bettery left for the wipe?). In our tests, it look less than 1 second for the wipe to initiate after the command was sent online.
I assume that your phone was out of battery at the time, and that is why it has not been wiped – yet. The wipe command comes from Google’s servers, so you must shut down ALL Internet activities on your phone.
Explanation: Android Device Manager has an app component on your phone, which is responsible for executing the wipe command. We will show you how to disable it before re-enabling internet communications.
To be on the safe side: BACKUP DATA YOU DON’T WANT TO LOSE.
Now would be a good time to look at our How to Back an Android Phone tutorial, where we explain how to backup over USB by copying files. Basically:
Hopefully, ADM was blocked for good, but if for some reason the wipe still happens as soon as you are online again, you will keep as much data as possible. Now you can turn the network (WiFi/Cellular) back ON, the phone should not be wiped.
Whether you choose to backup or not, now you can re-enable the network, and event reboot the phone. After that, you can go back in the security settings and re-enable ADM. Normally, the wipe command should no longer execute.
If you avoided a full wipe despite sending the request, bravo! There are things you can to ease you pain next time.
With strong security in place, the urge of triggering a wipe will not be as strong (or urgent) next time you lose/misplace your phone. Typically, people forget their phones in a place that opens in the morning or afternoon, so giving yourself 24 hours is not uncommon. Having some peace of mind that your data will be impossible to breach in that timeframe keeps your stress low.
After a remote wipe, the phone may ask you to log in with the SAME account the phone was last used with. This may be a theft deterrent, but if you are selling a phone, do at least a factory reset before shipping it. If you are concerned about recoverable data, here’s how to really wipe an Android phone, because the factory reset doesn’t wipe everything.
It has been well documented that it is impossible to retract a remote wipe request, you can read on the topic on the Google product forums. It has been discussed on StackExchange or the Verizon support forums. Maybe in the past, there was an ADM option to cancel (pre-2015?), but I have never seen it myself.
If you used ADM to lock your phone, it has asked you to enter a password. The phone might ask you to enter that password over and over.
To remove the Android Lock Password, just change your lock screen to a different type (swipe, fingerprint, pattern), and that is it. If you have it at “none,” the chances are that the password request will continue.