Published in Mobiles

Android warns of Apple stalkers

by on28 July 2023


Google provides a useful function

Search engine Google has come up with an Android function which will enable you to tell if you are being stalked by an Apple fanboy.

For a while now Apple fanboys have been putting Apple tags in people’s bags and cars so that they know where they are at all times.

When Google announced that trackers would be able to tie into its three billion-device Bluetooth tracking network at its Google I/O 2023 conference, it also said that it would make it easier for people to avoid being tracked by trackers they don't know about, like Apple AirTags.

Now Android users will soon get these "Unknown Tracker Alerts." Based on the joint specification developed by Google and Apple, and incorporating feedback from tracker-makers like Tile and Chipolo, the alerts currently work only with AirTags, but Google says it will work with tag manufacturers to expand its coverage.

For now, if an AirTag you don't own "is separated from its owner and determined to be travelling with you," a notification will tell you this and that "the owner of the tracker can see its location."

Tapping the notification brings up a map tracing back to where it was first seen travelling with you. Google notes that this location data "is always encrypted and never shared with Google."

 Further into the prompts, you can make the tracker play a sound, "without the owner of the tracker knowing," Google says.

If you bring the tracker to the back of your phone (presumably within NFC range), some trackers may provide their serial number and information about their owner, "like the last four digits of their phone number."

Google indicates it will also link to information about how to physically disable a tracker. Finally, Google offers a manual scan feature if you're suspicious that your Android phone isn't catching a tracker or want to see what's nearby. The alerts are rolling out through a Google Play services update to devices on Android 6.0 and above over the coming weeks.

Google is working to finish the joint tracking specification "by the end of this year."

The company added: "At this time, we've made the decision to hold the rollout of the Find My Device network until Apple has implemented protections for iOS."

Last modified on 28 July 2023
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