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no heavy petting?!.....Apple says 'AirTags' not designed to track pets or children......
#1
.....but to track items.....


Apple Executive Says AirTags Designed to Track Items, Not Children or Pets

....Following the announcement of AirTags this week, Apple's VP of worldwide iPhone product marketing, Kaiann Drance, and Apple's senior director of sensing and connectivity, Ron Huang, spoke with Fast Company about the Tile-like tracker and its design and privacy.

Speaking about the design of AirTag, Drance says Apple wanted to create a simple yet unique design for the tracker, keeping in mind it wanted to create something that "no one else in the industry’s ever done before." One of the biggest selling points for AirTag is its user privacy. Apple is stressing that AirTag uses encrypted networks, and Apple or other third parties can't read their location.

Huang says that even if someone happens to find your lost AirTag, they will not be able to pair it with their ?iPhone? and continue to use it. Both executives stressed during the interview that AirTag uses Apple's Find My network, which hosts almost a billion Apple devices, keeping the whole experience secure and private.

This entire process is end-to-end encrypted so that no one but the owner of the AirTag—not the owners of the crowdsourced devices picking up the AirTag’s location or even Apple itself—ever has access to the AirTag’s current or past location. And the Bluetooth identifiers that AirTags emit are not only randomized but “are rotated many times a day and never reused so that as you travel from place to place with the AirTag, you cannot be re-identified,” Huang says.

Drance and Huang are also keen to note that though almost a billion Apple devices act as a crowdsourced monitoring network that helps keep track of AirTags, the AirTag owner can never see which devices its AirTag’s location is pinging off of or who owns those devices.

Earlier in March, Apple introduced a new safety feature in its Find My app within the iOS 14.5 beta that will notify users if the iPhone detects an unknown tracking device, such as AirTag, being used to track them. The purpose of the feature is to prevent incidents in which someone may slip an AirTag into a user's backpack and use it to stalk them.

In the case that it does happen, users will receive a notification stating "AirTag Found Moving With You," and will then have the ability to disable it physically. Speaking about the safety feature, Drance says that users should contact local law enforcement if they feel their safety is at risk.

“If you are concerned that there’s a risk of your being tracked you could contact law enforcement,” Drance notes. “What the [AirTag’s] serial number is used for is when you first set up your AirTag it is paired with an Apple ID along with some additional information such as your name, your email address, your date of birth, and things like that, which [Apple] could provide to law enforcement if asked for, with the proper warrants and process.

”Apple is marketing AirTag as a smart and capable way to track items. Questions have arisen, however, if AirTag can be used to track children and pets. When asked, Apple's VP of iPhone product marketing says the company designed AirTag to track items, not children. The executive suggests parents use an Apple Watch with Family Setup to locate their children. In the case of tracking pets, Drance says they need to be in range.

When I asked Drance about parents using AirTags to track their small children (such as during an outing at an amusement park) or pets (we know you’re up to something shady, Fluffy) she was quick to stress that the company designed the AirTag to track items, not people or pets. If parents would like to safely track their young children, she suggests an Apple Watch with Family Setup might be a better choice.


As for strapping an AirTag to a pet, Drance says, “If people do that, they just have to make sure that their moving pet gets into range of a device in the Find My network” so its location can be tracked......



tag......you are not it.....?!
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#2
Hmmm...

Track your teen?

Track your wife?

Track his cheatin' heart?

The possibilities are endless
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#3
You know this is going to be used to track wayward significant others one way or another.
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#4
I wonder how well it would work to track a car. I'm thinking of trying to find it in a large parking lot. There have been times when my wife and I were traveling on different trips, and one of us would leave the car at the airport when departing and the other would pick it up when they return.

I guess that brings up another question about airtags, can the ability to track one be shared with multiple users?
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#5
NewtonMP2100 wrote:
As for strapping an AirTag to a pet, Drance says, “If people do that, they just have to make sure that their moving pet gets into range of a device in the Find My network” so its location can be tracked......

Which is exactly how I intend to use AirTags on my pets. If they get out of the house, they'll probably be hiding in the backyard somewhere. Even if they wander a few houses away, they should be in range of someone's phone, same as if I lose my wallet somewhere in the neighborhood.

The difference is my wallet will stay stationary (hopefully), so it only needs to be found once. My cat might keep moving, so by the time I get to the location s/he might have moved on and I will need to wait for an update.

So, yes, a GPS collar would be a better idea, but they are all subscription based and the batteries need to be recharged more often (as in weekly to monthly?). So for the maybe once every few years, if that, that a cat gets out, AirTags might provide a little assistance I wouldn't otherwise have. If they get out with a dead GPS collar, I have no assistance.

And two of the cats I'm sure will come back to the house (I brought them in from the backyard to begin with!). It's the pampered indoor his whole life cat we're the most worried about, who will likely just get scared, find a hiding spot and then stay there (which I'm pretty sure is what he did the one time he did get out, as I later looked at his journey best I could on the cameras, luckily when he heard my wife's shock and horror at realizing a door was open, he came running back to the door my wife was at and was waiting at the door to be let back in). But he also shows the most interest in our only indoor/outdoor cat and has been know to follow her into her outdoor airlock through 1 controlled pet door, but he hasn't made it through the actual outdoor pet door yet. Now I have to install a 2nd airlock door and have upgraded to internet controlled doors and installed cameras, so if I see him in the first airlock, I'll be able to lock down the other doors until he either exits himself or I get home to let him out.
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#6
GGD wrote:
I wonder how well it would work to track a car. I'm thinking of trying to find it in a large parking lot. There have been times when my wife and I were traveling on different trips, and one of us would leave the car at the airport when departing and the other would pick it up when they return.

Yea. The logical way to do that would be for your phone to note the last known position of an AirTag when they are separated. I.e. you park the car and when you walk away, your phone notes that position. Then hopefully you could share that position with your wife (probably easier if you're on the same family iCloud account?). And assuming AirTags are shareable through iCloud, when your wife gets in the general vicinity, the AirTag could help pinpoint the car.

No idea if it works that way. Let's hope it does, as it would solve the "lost my wallet in the forest problem". If you're hiking and lose your wallet, there may not be any other users for a long time, but if your phone recorded the last known position of your wallet, then you could go back to find it, without having to wait for another user to "find it".
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#7
.....some may wonder if this can be used to track a woman's period......
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#8
NewtonMP2100 wrote:
.....some may wonder if this can be used to track a woman's period......

I think you'd need a leak detector for that? https://www.amazon.com/Aqara-11LM-SJCGQ-...07D39MSZS/

(Newt started it!)
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#9
I think the warning is more about the possibility that pets and children might eat the device, a la the “Don’t Eat This iPod” warning of days of yore.
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#10
GGD wrote:
I wonder how well it would work to track a car. I'm thinking of trying to find it in a large parking lot. There have been times when my wife and I were traveling on different trips, and one of us would leave the car at the airport when departing and the other would pick it up when they return.

I guess that brings up another question about airtags, can the ability to track one be shared with multiple users?

For tracking the car, I really like my Zus, that was posted here some years ago. Not only does it track and locate the car, but gives info about battery voltage and if you pay for it, all sorts of other diagnostic info on the car, such as tire pressures, etc.

N-OS X-tasy! wrote:
I think the warning is more about the possibility that pets and children might eat the device, a la the “Don’t Eat This iPod” warning of days of yore.

You mean like this?:



... takes tracking to a whole new level.
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