ORLANDO, Fla. — Small devices, like the Apple AirTag, that can track your every move are becoming increasingly common, inciting fears about how they’re being used. Tim Noftsinger thought he’d picked ...
You wake up in the morning feeling surprisingly rested, ready to tackle the day ahead. Then you check your wearable device, ...
It's the stuff of spy movies: someone plants a GPS tracker or Apple AirTag in your car without your consent and uses it to track your every move. While this may seem like a farfetched scenario, it's ...
Apple and Google committed in May to build a specification to detect trackers from across iOS and Android platforms in a cooperative effort to fight the inappropriate use of Bluetooth ...
In an ideal world we would never lose our belongings, and not spend a single hour fruitlessly searching for some keys, a piece of luggage, a smartphone or one of the two dozen remote controls which ...
We’ve all been there—frantically searching for our keys as the clock ticks closer to an important meeting or digging through a cluttered bag for a wallet that seems to have vanished into thin air.
Apple launched the AirTag in April 2021, and the concept that helped it create the device was simple. People keep losing their valuables, including wallets and keys, and because almost everybody has a ...