This might just be the cynic in me, but people walking around with a $3500+ item attached to their face just screams "rob me!"
I mean, I got my comparatively-cheaper 2-year-old iPhone 12 Pro Max stolen from me about a year ago in a mugging, and that wasn't even nearly as flagrant. A person who wants to mug someone sees someone wearing an Apple Vision Pro, and they know that this person has a $3500 item glued to their face, as well probably an expensive iPhone in their pocket as well.
> I got my comparatively-cheaper 2-year-old iPhone 12 Pro Max stolen from me about a year ago in a mugging
That is just a dumb mugger since those phones can only be sold for parts given the way Apple locks them down with your password/Pin/Face. The only place those phones can go is on a ship container to China to be recycled for spare parts, and even that's dubious.
Not that I really want to defend someone who mugged me, but to be fair I don't think he knew it was an iPhone. I keep mine in a case and they grabbed it out of my hands pretty quick and ran. Even if they knew it was an iPhone and that I was going to lock it once I get home, I doubt he would go "Oh shit, is this an iPhone? Nevermind, you can have it back".
Fun fact, when I got home, I of course locked it right away, but I got my wife to call it to see if we could get ahold of the mugger, and we did, and he said he would give it back to me for $300.
There was no chance in hell I was going to give him money and reward extortion, and I had no guarantees that even if I did give him the money that I'd get the phone back anyway [1], but I suppose that that's still a market right? I suspect at least some percentage of people do end up paying just to minimize the headaches of having to buy a new phone. I'll admit that while it was never really "on the table", for just an instant I did consider just paying the guy instead of having to buy another expensive phone while unemployed.
[1] In this case I am principled to a fault. I have a very strong "I will not be extorted, I will not reward extortion, and I do not negotiate with terrorists" policy in my life. It's one of the very few hills I will actually die on, and it's bitten me a few times.
If they targeted you specifically because you had an iPhone to steal (or really, any Apple hardware), that would be dumb. If Android phones were easier to unlock when stolen, and could be confused for iPhones, that makes more sense. The extortion thing also makes sense, but I don't think many victims would take the chance that the situation would become worse after that (when handing over the cash).
Yeah, fair, and maybe people wouldn't bother stealing the Vision Pro. It's just not something I would walk around wearing, for the same reason I wouldn't walk around wearing a real Rolex (if I could afford one).
A Rolex is much more steal-able than a Apple device, since you can't lockdown mechanical movements. However, most of the people walking around with Rolexes are probably wearing fake ones, so even then its a crapshoot.
I don't know "numbers", they're probably not very high, but I have seen exactly one person walking around with one on Times Square.
I feel like that's been the discourse around it though, that this is something you're supposed to wear all the time and it gives you a proper augmented reality experience. Maybe that'll be the case eventually but I do not think we're there yet.
I mean, I got my comparatively-cheaper 2-year-old iPhone 12 Pro Max stolen from me about a year ago in a mugging, and that wasn't even nearly as flagrant. A person who wants to mug someone sees someone wearing an Apple Vision Pro, and they know that this person has a $3500 item glued to their face, as well probably an expensive iPhone in their pocket as well.