We're really living in a fun time aren't we 😂 To check out the equally-concerning Drama with NFTs, that videos here: th-cam.com/video/0pWTRsztTtY/w-d-xo.html
Your videos nowadays are getting less-smartphone related, and I still love them. Been a fan for over 3 years. Great videos with interesting topics Edit: Firstly, I think people misunderstood what I meant by this comment. I meant that usually I would dislike non-smartphone tech videos, but Mrwhosetheboss made interesting ones that made me like them, not that I want him to only make smartphone videos, as the people in the comments thought I meant. Secondly, not to sound cliché, but thanks for the likes as it provides me with some form of external validation :)
I did my own experiment to "stalk" some of my friends (with permission, of course). It's actually quite dangerous and can actually be used to stalk people, especially if the person doesn't have an iPhone. I even used it to "follow" my friend over 24 hours and it could still be used... but in the end airtags aren't the most dangerous "stalking device"... but it's the most available.
@@XVNRX Aren't the most dangerous in the sense that it's not wholly effective - I live in a densely populated city and the airtag has long periods without updates. What I mean is that there are actual dangerous stalking devices, more accurate than the airtag easily accessible.
I worked at an organization that supports and provides shelter to survivors of domestic violence and we’ve had to increasingly become better trained to find or detect spyware and it’s some of the first things we do with people when they come in. We have auto shops we work with who will look look over cars and take apart the outer accessible parts. It’s a completely nightmare for a survivor to uproot their family to get safe, only to be undermined and devastated by an abuser who won’t let them be without them and of course it can be lethal. The moment someone leaves is the riskiest part. Violence tends to escalate when the abuse loses their control.
A number of major cities and US states are seriously considering making the sale or use of these illegal. The wife of my sisters boss a long time family freind of ours was stalked and assaulted using these. He and a bunch of other business owners are thinking of actually banning the use of any Apple products on the company premises. This is not a small company either. He was told by the police that was estimated that over 80% of Air Tags were being used to commit crimes.
There really are two types of people one that work hard like you and one that do anything they can stealing or doing something embarissing just to get some money or some engagement
A really good video, didn't know much about the air tags anyway so was really useful and in one respect a really useful product to have why pay for a tracker on your car in case it gets stolen just get one of these.
@Joe they work great too, just depends on which device you use and the proportion is users in your area. For example in the US you would want an AirTag and in Korea you would want a Samsung tag. Pro’s and con’s of course exist for both but by the time you account for your phone and the phones around you, it’s not really as important.
Airtag is kinda tech fail. It would have been a useful tracker for all my stuff. I can even hide it somewhere inside my car and it would be an easy tracker. But it won't work because if the thief uses an iPhone, they can easily locate the tracker, or they can just wait for it to beep and just throw it away. The recent updates by Apple kinda defeats the initial purpose of the product.
@@mrjustcausegames5330 not really, I’ve spent a significant amount of time in singapore and Australia. In both there are many android users, however less than 70% used Samsung devices because affordable devices are used too. In these cases there are almost as many iPhones as Samsung phones. Many asian countries, Samsungs market share is not significant as their phones are often more expensive than better value android phones. I haven’t checked the exact numbers so I won’t assume I know. But my point being it’s too generalist and probably too assumptions that no where outside the US is Samsung not dominant
I remember reading a saying from a guy in the 60s, he said that in a few years, we would have no privacy, and we will be watched 24/7. He was referring to the security cameras, but now his words are even more accurate, now we have trackers like AirTags. Technology is scary stuff when misused
@@changedpace9169 eventually, yes. Depends on how much computing power they got, and though they'd just archive your data away, they can choose to examine it whenever they want, if they ever deem you a threat to their power.
@@changedpace9169 Very much so, ever heard of the term "five eyes"? It's illegal in most countries for your own government to monitor their citizens, it should go without saying that such a thing shouldn't even need any explicit law to already be off the table, yet here we are, however, what isn't illegal is for other countries to monitor you and thus anyone who participates in spying on of their neighbors can freely trade data on each other's citizens as a way around that.
@@vgamesx1 my point is that the government doesn’t give a shit about you, they aren’t going to waste resources to monitor 300 million plus people. They only monitor those who are considered threats to the government or criminals. If you don’t fill your house with cameras and microphone enabled devices you will be completely fine
@@vgamesx1 It's a waste of resources to track every citizen. Unless they have a targeted reason to track you, you are but a record in the government database. The real danger there is that such database is compromised by external forces. External forces that will eventually do their deed if not timely monitored/tracked.
The ironic thing about Apple's attempts to make them less useful for criminals is that these "improvements" make them less useful for finding a stolen item. For example, last year I had a bicycle stolen that had an AirTag on it. It likely started beeping a few minutes after the thief started moving it, alerting the thief to the AirTag's presence on the bicycle, whereupon the thief could smash the AirTag with a rock.
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD......
A few minutes? Try 8 hours after they moved it. If your bike got stolen overnight and you didn't notice for over 8 hours then sure, maybe it started beeping and they smashed it with a rock then, but it certainly wasn't a few minutes after they stole it. If they found it in a few minutes, you didn't hide it well enough and they just happened to spot the tag and got rid of it.
@@StreakyBaconMan It was under the bicycle seat. To be fair to me, there are not many places on a bicycle where you can hide an AirTag and not block the signal. Can you think of one?
Yes. I'm glad he made this video or else more people would be endangered by child predators, thieves, or people that like to dox people could have gotten to their homes and possibly dox them.
I have a friend who I speak with online these days and he had this story for me: His mom saw him packing snacks and stuff into a bag and guessed he was planning to sneak out, she hid an apple airtag in it and when he was there, called him to let him know that she knew exactly where he was. Fortunately, she was ok with and they had a good laugh
Apple could make it such that the airtags would not work if their speaker has been disabled or they've been tampered with in any other way. They've already done it with the iPhones, so this should not be a big deal. Also, instead of continually transmitting its location, the airtag's owner would have to request for it. the airtag would beep when it transmits it's location, alerting anyone in its vicinity who could be being stalked. This obviously is not perfect, since the beep may not always be audible or it may also alert a robber of its existence. That was the best solution i could think of though.
they cant, becuase it literally is so small that the tech is not present for it. they could with the Iphones as there was enough space to fit soemthing that checks for tampering. the airtag does not have that space. and how would requesting location transfer help, the stalkers could just request it. tho they could make it so that a abnormally high amount of requests would send red flags and beep and warn police
I remember that, a few months ago, I was at a school field trip when everyone on the bus received a notification that we were being tracked. Nothing (thankfully) has happened so far, but i remember being terrified
This was a concern when they first released it. The fact that it is cheap, is well hidden and lasts so long and is not easily traceable when away from the person/people who have registered it. I think the registration bit needs to be more seriously handled.
True but how do we do that in a private way for the owner because we don’t want to give any entity be it Apple or a government access to our identity and 24/7 location. While it’s a good point with a good sentiment, would you as a user want to tie your location to your identity?
@@AverageAlien I never said anything about banning or restricting them. Just tighter security checks. Guns can both protect and murder but they aren't available at your local convenience store now are they? The tags need to be registered with tighter security checks so the people who buy them are held accountable that is all. That would deter any malicious intent. For those who aren't trying to be criminals or murderers why would they have anything to be worried about?
I think the registration is fairly robust, or as much as it can be to protect the AirTag owner’s privacy as well. They can only be registered to a single Apple account and are non transferable. So even if you set up a dummy account to register the AirTag it you’d need other devices logged into that same dummy account that are going to share that location when the person is tracking the device. There are still going to be some ways around it and bad people are going to do bad things.
@@AverageAlien “the grow a pair, softie” is completely unnecessary. Especially when someone is regarding their safety. No one said anything about banning
While on vacation, I gave my 7 year old nephew an AirTag in case he got separated from us and lo and behold he definitely did get separated. His dad called me in a panic and I successfully used the AirTag to find him. They are dangerously useful.
It seems like the air tag also defeats the purpose of tracking your lost item when it’s stolen. So if the robber or thief steals your bags, they might hear the beeping or get notifications if they’re using iPhone. That’s if you or the police finds your bag before 12 hours is up.
Possible solutions : 1. Only police be allowed to silently track stuff. 2. You can silently track your airtag with only your iphone, in a range of 30-50 m from your phone. 3. Once you reach within 5 m of the airtag you're tracking, it'll make noise automatically. Maybe these can help. And as for tracking thieves silently, there's no point of confronting a professional thief, only the police are equipped to do so. If the thief is a coworker, then the 5 m alarm shouldn't be a problem.
@@asuprem3307 police aren't always dependable. When my friend's STi was towed and stolen from a Casino parking lot. The cops were no help at all. The event was on camera and all. They only helped when they told him to collect his stripped frame 2 states over on the side of the highway. Which was also ticketed🤦🏾♂️
I had the idea to make trackers using old pager airwaves in 2003 - just a simple thing so you could page your keys or whatever it was attached to... I went to a business info access center in Devon UK and they gave me the name of the local patent lawyers - when I contacted them 2 days later they said someone had literally just come to them with the same idea the day before - I wonder who that could have been?
Sounds like you had an Elisa Grey moment! (Elisa Grey was the inventor of the first functional telephone, but Alexander Graham Bell beat him to the patent office by just a few days.)
I had the same idea with STICKERS when I was in high school back in 2012 (10 years ago), and I even made a commercial video and presented it to my whole class, haha. I called it the ILT - Item Localizer Thingy, lmao.
I use one of these as a dog tag. I know they say not to do that, but the point I'm getting at is that those things make noise whenever the app is accessed. It would be incredibly difficult to hide one of them on someone's person without them knowing about it.
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD......
A woman just found one in her bag or coat pocket (idr which) after getting that notification after leaving a bar a few weeks ago. And she was lucky she got the notification which gave her the info that an apple device had been with her for an extended amount of time before reaching home. That could've been a really bad situation otherwise. We can't have nice things, which might help forgetful people like me, because nefarious assholes are just waiting to exploit everything they can. 🤦🏻♀️😕
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD...........
What I find interesting is how the tech works by piggybacking off other people devices without their prior consent. This destroys much trust a person has in their devices when they are doing things outside of the persons personal use without being agreed to. For instance the Bluetooth functionality is accepted because it is user activated and one would assume their phone is not being accessed without permission unless they authorize the connection on their phone themselves. But what happens when someone finds a way to hack phones when using such trackers to establish a Bluetooth connecting with the device and bypass any security that would deny this. And there is of course people who would wish to opt out of being apart of the tracker program and they did not buy a phone to then have it used to support other products/services they were not interested it. I'm curious about how others find this choice of a company to access peoples devices for the purpose of selling others a new product.
that is the one aspect of this apple actually is guilty of. They retroactively opted you as a consumer into this. Now, I don't technically believe this classifies as illegal although it might under some obscure definition. (It would primarily depend AFAIK on whether or not you could choose to avoid updating the device whenever the airtag support was added) Nor do I necessarily believe Apple doesn't have the right to do this. Apple has ALWAYS sold a locked down operating system on devices they control, that's their MO, you knew thats what you were buying, so you could make a convincing case that this is just a step in that process. However, instead of questioning the legality or morality of this which is more or less irrelevant, (since as mentioned it is so complex) lets instead realize who gives a shit because Apple pulls crap on it's consumers constantly and anyone sitll buying Apple products knows damn well what they are getting themselves into. If they somehow don't, let this teach them. The law is fickle, politicians can be bribed, laws have loopholes, but if you just inform people and educate them on what it is they are buying, a company can't bribe more money into existance. If no-one buys their shit, doesn't matter. (and if they ever DID try to somehow bribe more money into existence, it would be a PR nuke) People continue to argue about WHAT Apple does, has done, will do, etc and 9/10 its bad, so why the hell do people keep buying their shit. You haven't just been fooled once, you haven't just been fooled twice, you are inventing new god damn numbers to try to have a hope of recording how many times you have been fooled.
@@00700556 No one reads terms and conditions, and why should we expect them to? You expect consumers to read several pages of text to use a product and understand everything written in the text? Terms and conditions are essentially a legal formality; they don't have any practical usage.
Theres obvious concerns imo about apple in the latest years for me for just this weird behaviour, where they try to seclude themselves as the good guys, but then make bonkers decisions that break their own rules about established security and privacy things. Honestly, privacy is a product but it shouldnt be, apple sells themselves as like the only company you should trust, but they are all out on making big bucks from all the people that go with their flow and throw all kinds of money in for products they dont really need or even should buy. Most apple products offer less for more money and dont make sense at all from the big picture. It also shows very well how all this dumbening of the smart products hasnt really made lives easier but people dumber. I honestly dont even trust their secrecy on most things they do cause it sure does seem sometimes that they either are brainwashing people with false claims or just reversed advertising or just are more deeply in the US gvn than people think. Steve Jobs, altough he was an uptight asshole of hippy, wouldnt certainly be happy about apple in this day and age. It shows well in reviews also that people are so biased towards calling everything apple makes so wonderful and perfect, while i have many times more issues since i bought my 12 pro max and updates from my 300 euro honor 10. It doesnt feel like a complete product with all those downfalls of bugs, lags and just stuff not working how it should in logical sense. All worked perfectly on android and even when it got slow i knew i could count on it handling everything i wanted. Basically, i work at an apple store, but i dont recomment apple anymore. I dont care how great their chips are or how the ecosystem works together, if it means youre pretty much joining a jail with no way out.
I can only imagine my fear if I was told there was an AirTag on me. I would be terrified and check all of my pockets. Stalkers have always freaked me out.
Let me start by saying I love using AirTags for their intended purpose. I was just on a flight, where my friend’s luggage was lost. Before flying, she had asked me if I could put one in, since I had put one in my own bag, and since I had an extra one I said sure, I would put one in her suitcase and remove it when all the bags got where we needed to go safely. Well wouldn’t you know, the bag got lost. I was able to track it, and figured out that it did get to the destinations airport, so we were able to find the bag within a few minutes, not wasting time searching the origin airport. So that’s a really good use of the technology in my opinion. But I can definitely see how it can be used for bad as well. I could imagine, if I was for example a female Uber driver, being scared that an AirTag could be placed on the car, and then I’d be found home. I can see the argument from both sides. I don’t really have an answer.
Well on one side you had have possible help once a year when you go for holidays. On the other hand if you're a woman any rapist can fellow you home or to the secluded park much much much easier then before..
I never seen a female Uber because they always crash in Egypt until Uber decided to make a background check of the amounts of crashs they had 20% of female are drivers in Egypt the surprise Is 70% of people crash are female in Egypt lol
Thieves are such a fkn disease. Everyone’s struggling, but they want to climb on others instead of working hard like the rest of us. It’s such a fkn burden that people like this exist. Plz excuse my frustration.
Its dumb asf. This is what happens when you put too much trust in technology. You get people using it for bad intentions. That's why Uncle Ben said "With great power, comes great responsibility". Unfortunately, we live in a world full of irresponsible morons and sociopaths
@@toothfairy5352 dw I get you… my dads I phone 12 got stolen once and it was such a pain…😢 People need to learn to work hard instead of stealing from other people because they know it’s wrong and there not gonna get anywhere in life if they keep doing this.
i've thought about removing the speakers on 5 of my airtags due to them being hidden in my own vehicles incase someone steals my vehicles, the fact that speakerless versions are for sale on ebay from being modified will lead me to research on how to do it myself so the robber doesn't find them when he's in the middle of trying to hide my vehicle from public view and happens to own an iphone.
Your vehicle will most likely be chopped up or shipped overseas, meaning your airtag won't do much to get your vehicle back. Reselling a vehicle as is is the dumbest thing a criminal can do since every vehicle had a Vin which makes it extremely easy to prove who really owns it as well as it can never get registered in the United states
I'd say the one big thing Apple needs to do to make sure AirTags and other Find My network connected gadgets to stay in non-malicious hands is to just work with Google or even build a fork of AOSP and pull in an ambient BLE module with alerts and passive monitoring, this could also help them open up and widen the Find My network to the billions of Android devices worldwide.
Everyone don’t call this number from this fake WhatsApp it will break your phone making you get called 1000 times by different phone numbers every second it will give them your date of birth your passwords name age and everything like that with your credit card info
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD......
Whats really funny about this is that these videos are making this information more available to people who will use it this way, though I understand its so people can understand how it works, but it makes it more popular
In the same vein, you want to arm and equip everyday people with common sense knowledge around how to protect themselves in the case that something like this does occur. Evil will alaways find methods for their madness, but regular innocent folks need to know what they're up against and how to take the appropriate (proactive and reactive) measures to keep themselves safer.
On the serious note, you are absolutely right about people putting tags in nice cars. The Hellcats and Scat Packs of the Mopar community are getting tracked a lot.
Ultimate nightmare scenario: your bag with a tracker gets stolen, the thief finds and removes the tracker and places it in someone else's bag, the other person finds it and reports it to the police, who end up standing on your doorstep wanting an explanation.
When you bag gets stolen you go to AirTag Options and „tag“ it as stolen. so the next person „find“ the airtag he/she get anonymous data to call you. But yes I understand your Concern. There is no law for gadgets like this. C’est la vie
Now that is a true tech channel not just smartphones, you actually take the steps to tell people about tech it's advantages and shortcomings. 🔥🔥 Great Videos, Awesome Topics 🔥
Honestly its kinda scary that air tags work by communicating location information to random apple devices. This is straight out of my nightmares of if apple had complete control of the markets. I actually recently got a notification on my iPhone myself about an unknown AirTag having been following for a while. This was after a international flight and I had gotten to my room, and for a moment I was terrified. I was already in another country alone for the first time and then I was told someone was using an apple product to track me. It didn’t help I knew hardly anything about air tags (apple isn’t doing a great job advertising the danger for apple users either). When it said to find the tag and contact the police, I did everything to try and find the tag slipped into my luggage or somewhere and couldn’t. Eventually I just thought I had to ignore it and it went away. Weeks later and I still don’t know what spurred it or what happened to it or if I’m still being tracked.
After watching MKBHD vid on the blue vs green checkmark debacle in regards to SMS and why people are social status on it in america, it really does rain in quite hard. They say around 70% of people between 18-24 have an iphone. Apple's grip on the phone market stateside is pretty tight here so yeah it is pretty insane
Same happened here when I got of the NYC subway. Got home and received a notification that I was being followed by an unknown device. I dumped everything I had on the bed looking for it, and later found that it was someone’s else AirTag that was on them going in a similar direction.
@@Defensive_Wounds Samsung smart tag is the same to air tags. The only difference is that airtag has larger network than samsung making it more accurate.
His videos are so well explained that I am in a kind of trance while watching his videos. Usually I get sick of a video in 10min but his videos are so engaging plus they are so awareness spreading which at times can save your life. Who agrees? Tysm for the likes ;))
I do. He has seamless and unpredicted transitions, text randomly appearing on screen, background lights to stimulate the eye, a quick and fast speech to keep our attention. It's like he took everything attention-grabbing, compelling, and interesting then threw them into one pot and stirred.
Tbh Airtags in themselves aren't bad - I find it useful to track my car without worry for a year about the battery and by backpack in case it gets lost or stolen. But as always it's people's fault something possibly good is used for bad things...
Yeah I keep one on my keys so I can find it around the house before I leave. My backpack. Car. Its just like cars. Just because people are running over others doesn’t mean cars should be illegal
@@toptiertech7291 then they should be registered like cars are. I can easily get owners information using lisence plate. It should be same with air tags.
@Joe Not at all! It's a real threat that needs to be discussed and people need to be made aware. Also, Arun already asked the question in the video - Is it actually Apple's fault? And touched on Apple's security measures and their flaws, So he covered that, But then many people don't actually fully listen or watch a whole video before they comment. There's no need for Apple just to stop selling them, But it should be people's choice if they don't want to use them in certain situations, Or at all, AND to be aware of this stuff happening and take precautionary measures as Arun suggested - Which is helpful for many people.
I’m fairly security conscious. I also hardly ever use Bluetooth devices, so of course I always have my Bluetooth turned off to conserve battery. You just answered the question as to why every iOS update since around 14,2 has force-enabled Bluetooth even without the user’s awareness and consent… Not a good mark on Apple’s tab sheet, if you ask me!
@@foamylemming3912 The video comes across to me as stating that AirTags use Bluetooth, and have an optional BT wideband mode that’s activated for precise location by a nearby device when required. If I understand the inner workings correctly, an AirTag will broadcast its ID on a constant basis (Using BTLE this is very light on the battery) and any nearby Apple device - If it has BT enabled - Will forward that AirTag ID along with that devices present location to Apple and Find My. @Mrwhosetheboss might be able to clarify if this is indeed correct. :-) If AirTags don’t employ Bluetooth, which radio communication standard *are* they employing? One thing I can say - Hand on heart - Is that AirTags *aren’t* communicating directly with mobile/4G/5G or WiFi networks. There is no way an AirTag could use those means of communication and still get a years operation out of a CR2032 button cell! :-)
I've had my AirTag stolen. The airtags are terrible if you want to track your devices because the batteries can be disconnected from the AirTag. So a thief can use to AirTag and track the person. If you do get an AirTag and use it as a key chain just make sure the apple AirTag cannot be opened.
The anti track feature does work after 24 hrs. I bought an airtag to track my own bike and I use an Android phone. I setup the air tag with my iPad and was already disappointed to find out iPad doesn't support UWB. On the 2nd day, the airtag keeps beeping when I use it to bike to classes. Although I was carrying my iPad with the Bluetooth on. I think the air tag thinks my android phone is being followed (the Bluetooth on my phone is also on) so it doesn't stop beeping until I remove the battery. I returned the airtag the following day. Definitely don't get an airtag if you're using an Android phone.
You'd be surprised. People are wild, literally one video I saw there was hidden Cams everywhere in a hotel room, like 50 of them in every nook and cranny including inside the shower head.
"I didn't even know mini devices can track people like that" bruh, this is just dumb. How can you not know any of this tracking stuff. Unless you are a kid or new to the internet.
It would be VERY simple to make the AirTag ping once each time the location is viewed (and/or add a vibration engine). This would help deter trackers tremendously. Also Apple is good at blocking third party repairs, seems to me they would be able to make it nearly impossible to unhook the speaker. If they wanted to live up to their privacy claims, they would offer free upgrades from original AirTags to AirTags 2, while removing all original AirTags from the system. The solutions are out there, if they would just do it.
The thing is that makes no sense, since your own AirTag isn't a threat to you there's no reason for them to put resources into it, and on the other hand also people who actually mean harm with this device are not interested at all in trading the security threat device they just bought for a device with more security features. The only real solution to this is fix as much threats as they and start selling only the updated version of this product
That second solution though would be HORRENDOUS for the environment though, for the average person would most likely just throw it away rather than recycle it properly (via a tech recycling center). Your first one though is also redundant, because like Arun said in the video, speaker-less AirTags are being sold, meaning that the feature would just be bypassed in the same way.
@@lucastillej0 Hence the need to block third party repairs. And to get a new AirTag, you would be required to return the old one. I just can’t stand to see the idea die, it is so handy, there are just a few bugs to be worked out.
This kind of ruins a significant use in the case of theft of a backpack or bag. I wouldn't upgrade, and thanks to the replaceable battery, I needn't to either.
@@Lauren_C You are correct there, hadn’t thought of that. My boss uses them to track his trucks, in the event one would be stolen, thing is, the AirTag may notify them if their using an iPhone after 8 hrs anyway. 😕
I currently have 4 of them and when I was leaving my 2 Timelapse Rigs out on location for days at a time I felt good that I could see every once in a while that it was still on location without a monthly subscription but I can see how bad this could be
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD...........
Basically Apple says “if you don’t have an iPhone then your android device will not be able to know when you’re being stalked”. To anyone who calls me some “Android fan” or something accusing Apple, I’ve been using iPhone and Mac (I also have a super old iPad) without even considering Android or Windows for my whole (so far pretty short) life.
This can be REALLY dangerous if used incorrectly. Imagine being stalked by someone and they happen och be able to pop one of these in your bag. If you loose the stalker and preceed to walk home, he will know the exact location of your house and will from there basically do whatever he wants….
FYI ...when your phone and AirTags in same bag your phone registered in a sec that AirTag ... when you take your phone from your bag .....shows phone browser AirTag informations !
neat. get a gun. This has always been a threat, the only reason it's getting publicity now is because Apple is doing it and it's forcing people to realize how little agency they take in their own safety.
Apps can keep work in terminated states, you need to use native language of the system. It's a huge security concern, and providers only support with their system. So you have to use firebase for ios to keep getting data from the device when it's closed. Similar android
The hide and seek thing was filmed after and edited in when the video had already been fully recorded. When Arun is looking for Josh he's filming it himself. I may be right and may be wrong.
About 20 years ago I was a technician at a research company that was working on cutting edge tech for the time like wearable and tablet computers, video compression, ADSL and wireless networking. Most of the prototypes and products we used Apple has since made their own shiny white version and pretended it invented. A guy came there to give a talk about this concept of short range radio devices signal piggybacking on each other in a sort of physical cloud. Even back then my first thought was it was a terrible idea and would be an absolute security nightmare. And I was just thinking about the data being insecure, I didn't even consider the location tracking aspect. Crazy times.
A 60 year old lady was just killed a week ago because of an air tag. She used it to find her stolen car and when she confronted the thieves she was shot in the head.
To be fair that seems to be due to bad judgment. Once she found the thieves, she should have called the cops. Confronting the thieves directly was a terrible decision.
While it's not Apple's fault their product is being used for unintended purposes, now that they know about the issue, it is their responsibility to do something. Just making the Android app better, and the notification process for Apple phones better, could go a long way to doing that.
They knew perfectly well this would happen but why should they care? Stalkers pay for their products like anyone else, and oh! Why not get a hidden tracker to put on your loved one so if they do get kidnapped by the Apple fueled Stalker, you can find their body later, now Apple have sold two trackers just like that. They don't care at all, and these half measures will only fool idiots.
Taking a more pessimistic view of things, you could argue the point that Apple intentionally endangering people is a huge boon for iPhones. "It's the only device that warns you of the problem we created". Obviously, Apple isn't out there twirling their moustache that they've put people in danger, but if it brings a few extra dollars to their pockets as a result, they won't be complaining.
That's like saying it's on a hammer company to "do something" about a murderer using their hammer to commit murder. It's no one's fault or responsibility besides the malicious user's.
It is their fault for assuming the average device owner agrees to their device being used like this without their consent. What's next using our device's to actively listen for criminal activity (I kept this to the broad term as induvial labels would likely sound like justifications for this invasion of privacy) When such a device was created the existing device users should of been given a choice (the best I can assume is a T@C buried deep into the pages of reading saying the device will be used for more then personal use without the need for active consent)
Yeah sure so now as an android user I'll have a nifty app reporting my location non-stop to Apple servers. What a leap forward. Anyway the hacking community is constantly breaking their Bluetooth protocols, it's coded like ass to the point it's even more detrimental to the honest user than anyone else.
After thinking about it, I think I've concluded that this device was pretty much developed /with/ surveillance in mind - for one reason and one reason only. If you think about it, Apple and Google have both been using "Find My Device" technology for years. Only there's a difference here. With Apple's Airtags, there's only a notification (the audible beep) when the tracking has stopped (the device being unattended for eight hours, for example). With Google's approach, notification is instant the moment the tracking /starts/. All Apple needed to do was have it set so that when the user activates tracking, there is an auditory ping that notifies anyone in the area, "Hey, this device is being geolocated. Please help." Given that this device /already notifies other iPhone users of its existence anyway/, it would have only affirmed what Apple claimed they had been trying to do. The lack of transparency by Apple about this technology is ultimately what is going to lead to this product being used as it was designed to be used.
@@Wratchedlol I was thinking of that too. And it's not even like they should outlaw or moderate silent trackers. They would be very useful in cases of theft of a item or vehicle and having a pinging sound every time they are tracked would just notify the thief they are being tracked. It's a weird caveat to think maybe people just can't be trusted with this kind of technology at all because they are inevitably going to abuse it.
The thing is, this isn’t new technology. Trackers have been used for years, the reason AirTags is making it into the news is that they have an “Anti-Tracking” software. Have they not done that, no one would be talking about it. Imagine all the things being tracked by Tile right now or Samsung SmartTag, because they don’t notify the user they are being followed, they technically are more dangerous.
@@markIrSa when there's a will there's a way, but there is something to be said about how popular apple products are and how easy it is to use so anybody can do it on a whim with no experience or research necessary.
Won’t work because no one cares what happens to you. For example when most people hear a car alarm we just want it to stop. Like turn that shit off or steal that car faster
How do you learn to turn off the notification so the car thief doesn’t know an AirTag is following them??? Doesn’t that defeat the whole person?? You don’t WANT the thief to know they’re being followed!
Love how your production quality has improved so much! Editing is top notch and the script is written with a high information:time ratio! One of my favorite tech channels :)
the scariest part is not the airtag itself, but the way is works. I can own an apple product and dont want/ dont have airtags, that doesnt matter, my device will be used to track them. That is the thing that really scares me the most.
Why? Why should you be scared? The information just gets passed on, and no one can intercept it or track the source. This guy is just fearbaiting y’all
The fact that they're so small makes them very easy to conceal as well. Atleast Apple is aware of the problem. Hopefully they'll come with a good solution eventually.
this is a really cool informative video of the safety aspect of these tags, the major thing that shocked me is that the tags are so cheap for being an apple product, i didn't realise how good they were but i am a sucker for losing stuff so i think it might be a worthwhile investment for me
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD......
Almost any technology can be misused but the reason AirTags are being misused so much is that they work pretty darn well for their price. I'm surprised Apple's own internal review and marketing teams never thought to raise this issue.
I am pretty sure they did and I would gladly believe that one asshole might have even said "Well they should buy an iPhone to know who is tracking them"
@Joe how exactly? You will never know if you have an AirTag on you if you don’t own an iPhone. On Android you have to manually initiate a scan to know if there is an AirTag near you. Devices that run anything older than iOS14.5 will not be able to detect the AirTag and there is no alternative for those devices.
@Joe Way to put the burden to ordinary citizens than to push Apple to find a solution. Seems like airtag is much more concerning than robberies itself.
@@berryx8192 "You can just download the app so you can track airtags that may or may not be an issue." "Nobody I trust has explicitly confirmed this niche issue, therefore it's not true." "Don't want to get the app? Get a new iPhone. Surely you aren't poor enough to buy a new iPhone?" "Not listening to your counterarguments, I muted you already lol. Like, what the heck is wrong with Joe? It's like they're just blocking their ears and refusing to listen to anything.
One fact that stopped Airtags criminal use is that they are actually quite expensive in some countries. Brazil, for example, has lots and lots of crime, but the 4 airtags pack costs as much as a minimum monthly wage here, so, not really worth it. Not only that, but nearly as much people here have iphones than in other parts of the world, so, airtags wouldn't be so accurate. So, in subdeveloped countries using airtags to stalk people isn't really a concern, at least not for normal people.
Exactly that's what im saying. People are acting like that air tags are a actual threat. When normal trackers are cheaper and don't have any security precautions.
You can't call it "not sub developed country issue" because if Apple products were made affordable in all countries, then more people will have it. Its not the country's economy alone that determines the product cost.
The one thing I was hoping to hear in this video is where does the responsibility fall on the person doing the tracking/stalking? We are quick to point to a manufacture yet slow to look at the person doing the shady act. Or does this fall into the category, at least here in the States, 'everyone has right. no one has responsibilities"
Apple has control over the AirTags, the cause of the problem. You can lock the offenders up, but only Apple can actually stop the tags from being used like this.
We're pointing at the manufacturer because pointing at the bad actor is pointless. Bad actors will always exist and the manufacturer is at fault for developing and releasing a product that is too easy to abuse.
@@theuncalledfor what about kitchen knives, baseball bats, crowbars, guns, cameras,ETC. there are so many items that can be used in a malicious manner. Like if someone uses a high zoom camera to snap pictures of someone on their homes, it is the manufactures fault. If someone stabs another person with a knife is it the knife manufacturer’s fault. Heck people can use computers to hack into your phone or pc to access your bank account, personal photos, etc.
Bad interpretation. All parties have rights AND responsibilities. Cigarette companies have rights but also have the legal responsibility to warn the public…which they do. Apple has the right to make such a product, but has the responsibility to make sure it does not cause harm in any capacity. The second a murder or rape happens because of an AirTag, Apple is going to face serious consequences especially if the person in question had an Android device since there’s no way for them to know they are being followed. It’s a legislation against Apple’s walled garden waiting to happen, and it’s so avoidable.
@@RiseUpToYourAbility It’s Apple’s fault because they make no attempt in making the technology accessible for all users. If Android had access to both use and detect (ideally baked into the OS) then Apple can sleep safely at night knowing they did everything they could to make sure the product is as safe as possible for the public. Lawsuits would be hard to counter that. I’m sure Google would be more than happy to bake it into the software since it’s both a security issue waiting to happen and a huge benefit for their consumers to use AirTags. Apple is the one that wants a walled garden, and is AOK if someone gets murdered, raped, or robbed for them to preserve their ecosystem superiority. Their lack of attention on the Android side of things for a product that spy’s on you without even knowing it IS their fault. It’s only a matter of time until such a case happens and it goes to court.
Mrs. Lucy Baldwin is the right person to start trading cryptocurrency with.. she knows her way around the crypto world.. she has been helping me increase my investment every day for over months... She is a genius, have made close to 1btc through her
As someone with a fear of stalkers, this was a great thing to watch before bed... not. Seriously though this was really informative, well worded and laid out. Thank you. You earned a subscription from me.
What a great video. I have just bought these for my dad and was interested to see how well they work. I myself am a Samsung fan and would love to see a video on the galaxy smart tags.
I didn't know these could have the battery removed. My friend had one put in her pocket when we were together. I ended up giving it the Dwayne Johnson (hitting it with a rock) treatment. If we had gotten back to my house I probably would have microwaved it. Honestly this was no big deal for me. I'm a large man who has multiple firearms. But for a 5' (152cm) woman that is horrifying. She ended up spending the night in my guest room because she was scared to go home. I don't can't even blame her for it. This is an experience that shock my friend and it angers me to no end. Call me overly protective but someone doing this to anyone I care about makes me want to put my boot way up their butt hole. Like you need surgery to get it out deep.
We're really living in a fun time aren't we 😂
To check out the equally-concerning Drama with NFTs, that videos here: th-cam.com/video/0pWTRsztTtY/w-d-xo.html
Just wait till brain chips come out lol
NFT = 🤡
Its weird😔
hey!
10 million yeaah
This man’s production quality is unlike anyone else. Just so polished! Love it
I know right
Alwaysss
Stolen comment but ok
@@thermonuclear1906 no it's not stolen, other people copied this one
@@thermonuclear1906 dumb comment but ok
Your videos nowadays are getting less-smartphone related, and I still love them. Been a fan for over 3 years. Great videos with interesting topics
Edit: Firstly, I think people misunderstood what I meant by this comment. I meant that usually I would dislike non-smartphone tech videos, but Mrwhosetheboss made interesting ones that made me like them, not that I want him to only make smartphone videos, as the people in the comments thought I meant. Secondly, not to sound cliché, but thanks for the likes as it provides me with some form of external validation :)
It's always tech related
@@clashoftalents8439 before it was more smart phone related
Plenty of smartphone stuff coming very soon tho! 👀
@@Mrwhosetheboss yeah
But seriously apple airtag video
Spook me a bit
Nowadays there is not much innovation in smartphones
I did my own experiment to "stalk" some of my friends (with permission, of course). It's actually quite dangerous and can actually be used to stalk people, especially if the person doesn't have an iPhone. I even used it to "follow" my friend over 24 hours and it could still be used... but in the end airtags aren't the most dangerous "stalking device"... but it's the most available.
Yeah they are l I
Aren’t the most dangerous????? You just proved it
@@XVNRX Aren't the most dangerous in the sense that it's not wholly effective - I live in a densely populated city and the airtag has long periods without updates. What I mean is that there are actual dangerous stalking devices, more accurate than the airtag easily accessible.
I agree with the last sentence. There are thousands of other devices avaiable to track people. Tech like airtags has existed for years.
I worked at an organization that supports and provides shelter to survivors of domestic violence and we’ve had to increasingly become better trained to find or detect spyware and it’s some of the first things we do with people when they come in. We have auto shops we work with who will look look over cars and take apart the outer accessible parts. It’s a completely nightmare for a survivor to uproot their family to get safe, only to be undermined and devastated by an abuser who won’t let them be without them and of course it can be lethal. The moment someone leaves is the riskiest part. Violence tends to escalate when the abuse loses their control.
The stalker in his room legit scared me.
me to
A number of major cities and US states are seriously considering making the sale or use of these illegal. The wife of my sisters boss a long time family freind of ours was stalked and assaulted using these. He and a bunch of other business owners are thinking of actually banning the use of any Apple products on the company premises. This is not a small company either. He was told by the police that was estimated that over 80% of Air Tags were being used to commit crimes.
Thats awful!
There really are two types of people one that work hard like you and one that do anything they can stealing or doing something embarissing just to get some money or some engagement
@@Mrwhosetheboss ok
@@Mrwhosetheboss can you reply me 👀
They should make a contract inorder to buy these things
A really good video, didn't know much about the air tags anyway so was really useful and in one respect a really useful product to have why pay for a tracker on your car in case it gets stolen just get one of these.
@Joe they work great too, just depends on which device you use and the proportion is users in your area. For example in the US you would want an AirTag and in Korea you would want a Samsung tag. Pro’s and con’s of course exist for both but by the time you account for your phone and the phones around you, it’s not really as important.
@@kushalraj well correction and most of the world you Would want a Samsung tag but in America you’d want an apple tag
Airtag is kinda tech fail. It would have been a useful tracker for all my stuff. I can even hide it somewhere inside my car and it would be an easy tracker. But it won't work because if the thief uses an iPhone, they can easily locate the tracker, or they can just wait for it to beep and just throw it away. The recent updates by Apple kinda defeats the initial purpose of the product.
@@pauljnr2470 just hide it well in a car, somewhere you have to take appart to get to gives them more hassle.
@@mrjustcausegames5330 not really, I’ve spent a significant amount of time in singapore and Australia. In both there are many android users, however less than 70% used Samsung devices because affordable devices are used too. In these cases there are almost as many iPhones as Samsung phones. Many asian countries, Samsungs market share is not significant as their phones are often more expensive than better value android phones.
I haven’t checked the exact numbers so I won’t assume I know. But my point being it’s too generalist and probably too assumptions that no where outside the US is Samsung not dominant
I remember reading a saying from a guy in the 60s, he said that in a few years, we would have no privacy, and we will be watched 24/7. He was referring to the security cameras, but now his words are even more accurate, now we have trackers like AirTags.
Technology is scary stuff when misused
Do you think the government cares enough about you to watch you?
@@changedpace9169 eventually, yes. Depends on how much computing power they got, and though they'd just archive your data away, they can choose to examine it whenever they want, if they ever deem you a threat to their power.
@@changedpace9169 Very much so, ever heard of the term "five eyes"?
It's illegal in most countries for your own government to monitor their citizens, it should go without saying that such a thing shouldn't even need any explicit law to already be off the table, yet here we are, however, what isn't illegal is for other countries to monitor you and thus anyone who participates in spying on of their neighbors can freely trade data on each other's citizens as a way around that.
@@vgamesx1 my point is that the government doesn’t give a shit about you, they aren’t going to waste resources to monitor 300 million plus people. They only monitor those who are considered threats to the government or criminals. If you don’t fill your house with cameras and microphone enabled devices you will be completely fine
@@vgamesx1 It's a waste of resources to track every citizen. Unless they have a targeted reason to track you, you are but a record in the government database. The real danger there is that such database is compromised by external forces. External forces that will eventually do their deed if not timely monitored/tracked.
The ironic thing about Apple's attempts to make them less useful for criminals is that these "improvements" make them less useful for finding a stolen item. For example, last year I had a bicycle stolen that had an AirTag on it. It likely started beeping a few minutes after the thief started moving it, alerting the thief to the AirTag's presence on the bicycle, whereupon the thief could smash the AirTag with a rock.
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD......
@@davidhartman-b9mayooo crazy bot alert
That’s why you need to remove the speaker!
A few minutes? Try 8 hours after they moved it. If your bike got stolen overnight and you didn't notice for over 8 hours then sure, maybe it started beeping and they smashed it with a rock then, but it certainly wasn't a few minutes after they stole it. If they found it in a few minutes, you didn't hide it well enough and they just happened to spot the tag and got rid of it.
@@StreakyBaconMan It was under the bicycle seat. To be fair to me, there are not many places on a bicycle where you can hide an AirTag and not block the signal. Can you think of one?
We don't appreciate this guy enough, he really made a 10 minute video about the smallest piece of tech and he did it with near TV quality. Amazing!
All the videos he makes is for the channel, not charity.
@@itsgonnabeanaurfromme
He donated everywhere which is including teamseas
Lmao dude he does it for views , subscribers , and his channel not for some Free Social help.
Gen Z i tell you 🤣
Yes. I'm glad he made this video or else more people would be endangered by child predators, thieves, or people that like to dox people could have gotten to their homes and possibly dox them.
@@itsgonnabeanaurfrommeI haven't watched the video but what does charity have to do with this video?
I have a friend who I speak with online these days and he had this story for me: His mom saw him packing snacks and stuff into a bag and guessed he was planning to sneak out, she hid an apple airtag in it and when he was there, called him to let him know that she knew exactly where he was. Fortunately, she was ok with and they had a good laugh
@Communist Antarctica Or an abusive partner.
Ik it sucks seeing one's own kids be dishonest, but violating their privacy aint it chief.
Sticking a tracking device into the bag of someone else's minor child without explicit permission is not illegal, LMAO?
@@wesgregg6451 its their mum
@@wesgregg6451 But it's his own mom who puts the tracking device on him
You surely misunderstood
Apple could make it such that the airtags would not work if their speaker has been disabled or they've been tampered with in any other way. They've already done it with the iPhones, so this should not be a big deal. Also, instead of continually transmitting its location, the airtag's owner would have to request for it. the airtag would beep when it transmits it's location, alerting anyone in its vicinity who could be being stalked. This obviously is not perfect, since the beep may not always be audible or it may also alert a robber of its existence. That was the best solution i could think of though.
It's an excellent advice
Nearly any anti-tamper mechanism can be bypassed. And a speaker can be emulated.
I think they are gluing the speaker so it "triggers" but doesn't move so cant make a sound.
they cant, becuase it literally is so small that the tech is not present for it. they could with the Iphones as there was enough space to fit soemthing that checks for tampering. the airtag does not have that space. and how would requesting location transfer help, the stalkers could just request it. tho they could make it so that a abnormally high amount of requests would send red flags and beep and warn police
@@normalchannel2185 the iphone is a phone
Very compact, not much space
I remember that, a few months ago, I was at a school field trip when everyone on the bus received a notification that we were being tracked. Nothing (thankfully) has happened so far, but i remember being terrified
Yes
I have also experienced that.
It is probably one of the teachers AirTag
AirTags in nutshell :
Pros : Make it easier to find missing people
Cons : Make it easier to make people go missing
You should switch those around
@@mariodev2188yo?
@@mariodev2188 ayoo? 🤨
@@mariodev2188 *H O L ' U P*
@@mariodev2188 whait a minute
This was a concern when they first released it. The fact that it is cheap, is well hidden and lasts so long and is not easily traceable when away from the person/people who have registered it. I think the registration bit needs to be more seriously handled.
True but how do we do that in a private way for the owner because we don’t want to give any entity be it Apple or a government access to our identity and 24/7 location. While it’s a good point with a good sentiment, would you as a user want to tie your location to your identity?
No, none of that. Sometimes people use tools to do bad things. Does that mean we ban or restrict the tools? Hell no. Grow a pair, softie
@@AverageAlien I never said anything about banning or restricting them. Just tighter security checks. Guns can both protect and murder but they aren't available at your local convenience store now are they? The tags need to be registered with tighter security checks so the people who buy them are held accountable that is all. That would deter any malicious intent. For those who aren't trying to be criminals or murderers why would they have anything to be worried about?
I think the registration is fairly robust, or as much as it can be to protect the AirTag owner’s privacy as well. They can only be registered to a single Apple account and are non transferable. So even if you set up a dummy account to register the AirTag it you’d need other devices logged into that same dummy account that are going to share that location when the person is tracking the device. There are still going to be some ways around it and bad people are going to do bad things.
@@AverageAlien “the grow a pair, softie” is completely unnecessary. Especially when someone is regarding their safety. No one said anything about banning
While on vacation, I gave my 7 year old nephew an AirTag in case he got separated from us and lo and behold he definitely did get separated. His dad called me in a panic and I successfully used the AirTag to find him. They are dangerously useful.
God and Jesus Christ Loves You and Cares For Us.AMEN!!🙏🏾✝️😊
@@kruley-jr1591 my ball itch
:)
@@kruley-jr1591 Just like I cared for your mom last night.
All hail lord Satan as he has led you back to your child! 🙏🙏🙏
Keep the faith and our God will keep you!
Until someone else located him
It seems like the air tag also defeats the purpose of tracking your lost item when it’s stolen. So if the robber or thief steals your bags, they might hear the beeping or get notifications if they’re using iPhone. That’s if you or the police finds your bag before 12 hours is up.
Possible solutions :
1. Only police be allowed to silently track stuff.
2. You can silently track your airtag with only your iphone, in a range of 30-50 m from your phone.
3. Once you reach within 5 m of the airtag you're tracking, it'll make noise automatically.
Maybe these can help.
And as for tracking thieves silently, there's no point of confronting a professional thief, only the police are equipped to do so. If the thief is a coworker, then the 5 m alarm shouldn't be a problem.
I think it will contradict with the policy that AirTag is used to track "Lost" items and not "Stolen" items.
If your item is stolen call the police, AirTags won’t help you.
@@asuprem3307 police aren't always dependable. When my friend's STi was towed and stolen from a Casino parking lot. The cops were no help at all. The event was on camera and all. They only helped when they told him to collect his stripped frame 2 states over on the side of the highway. Which was also ticketed🤦🏾♂️
You have the option to let it beep if you want. Don’t make any sound with it when tracking your device, work smart
I had the idea to make trackers using old pager airwaves in 2003 - just a simple thing so you could page your keys or whatever it was attached to... I went to a business info access center in Devon UK and they gave me the name of the local patent lawyers - when I contacted them 2 days later they said someone had literally just come to them with the same idea the day before - I wonder who that could have been?
Sounds like you had an Elisa Grey moment!
(Elisa Grey was the inventor of the first functional telephone, but Alexander Graham Bell beat him to the patent office by just a few days.)
@@InventorZahran fake news woman = 666 lies Elisa = new elisa = nwo = new world order + 1984 George Orwell book so do not trust it OK
@@umamifan what the fuck are you even talking about
I had the same idea with STICKERS when I was in high school back in 2012 (10 years ago), and I even made a commercial video and presented it to my whole class, haha. I called it the ILT - Item Localizer Thingy, lmao.
@@umamifan Ok flatemar
It’s amazing how good your videos are this year! Keep it up 👍🏼
Yeah
I use one of these as a dog tag. I know they say not to do that, but the point I'm getting at is that those things make noise whenever the app is accessed. It would be incredibly difficult to hide one of them on someone's person without them knowing about it.
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD......
Airtags are actually seriously dangerous thanks for spreading awareness Arun!
How did you watch it so quickly?
@@kaizentruth8098 x2 speed is a life saver
Bro ik what happens with airtags and i was thanking Arun for making the video
@@kaizentruth8098 or he didn't
@@kinwahkan1773 🤔even at 2xs a 10 minute video would be 5 minutes but nonetheless, I’m happy he is spreading the word too
2 bangers in 2 days! Nice
I know right? Which is amazing
You haven't even watched the video yet.
make this the most liked comment
@@SalveASMR but you know every video he uploads are bangers
@@SalveASMR we already know it's a banger
Wasn't expecting a video today but you always manager to brighten up my day. Thanks Arun!
High productivity man
Bayern munich eh
Yea he always managers to do that😆😁
ok
@Aj sharma yeah ik bro I'm just joking
A woman just found one in her bag or coat pocket (idr which) after getting that notification after leaving a bar a few weeks ago. And she was lucky she got the notification which gave her the info that an apple device had been with her for an extended amount of time before reaching home. That could've been a really bad situation otherwise. We can't have nice things, which might help forgetful people like me, because nefarious assholes are just waiting to exploit everything they can. 🤦🏻♀️😕
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD...........
I've heard about this, glad you're addressing the issue, obviously they weren't meant to be used like this but its just concerning
Apple should've at least considered how people might use it for malicious purposes.
@@iloveplasticbottles They did. Hence all the security features.
@@moswanedev hence still ppl are being spied
could be solved easily if they do not allow other iphones lookup other's airtags but still able to use other's iphone network just not notifying them.
@@mosalahmosalahrunningdownt5579 dude , if an unknown airbag is in your car , you will get a notification on your iphone. So , calm down.
What I find interesting is how the tech works by piggybacking off other people devices without their prior consent.
This destroys much trust a person has in their devices when they are doing things outside of the persons personal use without being agreed to.
For instance the Bluetooth functionality is accepted because it is user activated and one would assume their phone is not being accessed without permission unless they authorize the connection on their phone themselves.
But what happens when someone finds a way to hack phones when using such trackers to establish a Bluetooth connecting with the device and bypass any security that would deny this.
And there is of course people who would wish to opt out of being apart of the tracker program and they did not buy a phone to then have it used to support other products/services they were not interested it.
I'm curious about how others find this choice of a company to access peoples devices for the purpose of selling others a new product.
that is the one aspect of this apple actually is guilty of. They retroactively opted you as a consumer into this. Now, I don't technically believe this classifies as illegal although it might under some obscure definition. (It would primarily depend AFAIK on whether or not you could choose to avoid updating the device whenever the airtag support was added) Nor do I necessarily believe Apple doesn't have the right to do this. Apple has ALWAYS sold a locked down operating system on devices they control, that's their MO, you knew thats what you were buying, so you could make a convincing case that this is just a step in that process. However, instead of questioning the legality or morality of this which is more or less irrelevant, (since as mentioned it is so complex) lets instead realize who gives a shit because Apple pulls crap on it's consumers constantly and anyone sitll buying Apple products knows damn well what they are getting themselves into. If they somehow don't, let this teach them. The law is fickle, politicians can be bribed, laws have loopholes, but if you just inform people and educate them on what it is they are buying, a company can't bribe more money into existance. If no-one buys their shit, doesn't matter. (and if they ever DID try to somehow bribe more money into existence, it would be a PR nuke) People continue to argue about WHAT Apple does, has done, will do, etc and 9/10 its bad, so why the hell do people keep buying their shit. You haven't just been fooled once, you haven't just been fooled twice, you are inventing new god damn numbers to try to have a hope of recording how many times you have been fooled.
And Apple does this while claiming they care about their users "privacy".
Pretty sure when you accept those software updates it’s in the fine print somewhere lol
@@00700556 No one reads terms and conditions, and why should we expect them to? You expect consumers to read several pages of text to use a product and understand everything written in the text? Terms and conditions are essentially a legal formality; they don't have any practical usage.
Theres obvious concerns imo about apple in the latest years for me for just this weird behaviour, where they try to seclude themselves as the good guys, but then make bonkers decisions that break their own rules about established security and privacy things. Honestly, privacy is a product but it shouldnt be, apple sells themselves as like the only company you should trust, but they are all out on making big bucks from all the people that go with their flow and throw all kinds of money in for products they dont really need or even should buy. Most apple products offer less for more money and dont make sense at all from the big picture. It also shows very well how all this dumbening of the smart products hasnt really made lives easier but people dumber. I honestly dont even trust their secrecy on most things they do cause it sure does seem sometimes that they either are brainwashing people with false claims or just reversed advertising or just are more deeply in the US gvn than people think. Steve Jobs, altough he was an uptight asshole of hippy, wouldnt certainly be happy about apple in this day and age. It shows well in reviews also that people are so biased towards calling everything apple makes so wonderful and perfect, while i have many times more issues since i bought my 12 pro max and updates from my 300 euro honor 10. It doesnt feel like a complete product with all those downfalls of bugs, lags and just stuff not working how it should in logical sense. All worked perfectly on android and even when it got slow i knew i could count on it handling everything i wanted. Basically, i work at an apple store, but i dont recomment apple anymore. I dont care how great their chips are or how the ecosystem works together, if it means youre pretty much joining a jail with no way out.
I can only imagine my fear if I was told there was an AirTag on me. I would be terrified and check all of my pockets. Stalkers have always freaked me out.
I think the reason they scare me so much is just the idea of a random person watching someone else. *shivers*
@@ellecharlie6822 theres no need for you to be scared of stalkers, nobody cares about you enough to stalk you.
@@faller70 but no one cares to him but to your's is no one loves u
@@GogoGaga7352 did you have a stroke typing that?
@@xrainbowdash4963 It's honestly mind blowing that i can still understand what he tried to say.
Let me start by saying I love using AirTags for their intended purpose. I was just on a flight, where my friend’s luggage was lost. Before flying, she had asked me if I could put one in, since I had put one in my own bag, and since I had an extra one I said sure, I would put one in her suitcase and remove it when all the bags got where we needed to go safely. Well wouldn’t you know, the bag got lost. I was able to track it, and figured out that it did get to the destinations airport, so we were able to find the bag within a few minutes, not wasting time searching the origin airport. So that’s a really good use of the technology in my opinion. But I can definitely see how it can be used for bad as well. I could imagine, if I was for example a female Uber driver, being scared that an AirTag could be placed on the car, and then I’d be found home. I can see the argument from both sides. I don’t really have an answer.
Well on one side you had have possible help once a year when you go for holidays. On the other hand if you're a woman any rapist can fellow you home or to the secluded park much much much easier then before..
I never seen a female Uber because they always crash in Egypt until Uber decided to make a background check of the amounts of crashs they had
20% of female are drivers in Egypt the surprise
Is 70% of people crash are female in Egypt lol
Thieves are such a fkn disease. Everyone’s struggling, but they want to climb on others instead of working hard like the rest of us. It’s such a fkn burden that people like this exist. Plz excuse my frustration.
Its dumb asf. This is what happens when you put too much trust in technology. You get people using it for bad intentions. That's why Uncle Ben said "With great power, comes great responsibility". Unfortunately, we live in a world full of irresponsible morons and sociopaths
@@toothfairy5352 dw I get you… my dads I phone 12 got stolen once and it was such a pain…😢
People need to learn to work hard instead of stealing from other people because they know it’s wrong and there not gonna get anywhere in life if they keep doing this.
i've thought about removing the speakers on 5 of my airtags due to them being hidden in my own vehicles incase someone steals my vehicles, the fact that speakerless versions are for sale on ebay from being modified will lead me to research on how to do it myself so the robber doesn't find them when he's in the middle of trying to hide my vehicle from public view and happens to own an iphone.
Counter Airtag tactic.
Just open the airtag and cut speaker wire, done.
Your vehicle will most likely be chopped up or shipped overseas, meaning your airtag won't do much to get your vehicle back. Reselling a vehicle as is is the dumbest thing a criminal can do since every vehicle had a Vin which makes it extremely easy to prove who really owns it as well as it can never get registered in the United states
Don't vehicles have better and more complex tracking technology including kill switch?
Newer trend is just stealing parts from vehicle because of this
I'd say the one big thing Apple needs to do to make sure AirTags and other Find My network connected gadgets to stay in non-malicious hands is to just work with Google or even build a fork of AOSP and pull in an ambient BLE module with alerts and passive monitoring, this could also help them open up and widen the Find My network to the billions of Android devices worldwide.
Exactly! They should work with Google to come up with something as this is actually a serious safety concern.
Apple refuses to work with Google for RCS, let alone to add some universal protocol for AirTags.
Apple couldn’t care any less about android users, and they hate Microsoft 😂😂
@@LouisSubearth Nope, they’re likely to work with Google to in that matter. Because they already allow AirTags on android.
@@Racko. AirTags have an NFC chip in them, but that's about it for Android interfacing.
Seriously, thank you for this public safety announcement. It's one of the reasons I like your channel so much!
Everyone don’t call this number from this fake WhatsApp it will break your phone making you get called 1000 times by different phone numbers every second it will give them your date of birth your passwords name age and everything like that with your credit card info
@@loganvr9490 thank you for telling me.
hundredth like :)
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD......
Whats really funny about this is that these videos are making this information more available to people who will use it this way, though I understand its so people can understand how it works, but it makes it more popular
In the same vein, you want to arm and equip everyday people with common sense knowledge around how to protect themselves in the case that something like this does occur. Evil will alaways find methods for their madness, but regular innocent folks need to know what they're up against and how to take the appropriate (proactive and reactive) measures to keep themselves safer.
Was just thinking this myself, I had no idea about till all these videos started talking about it, it’s like a marketing campaign
On the serious note, you are absolutely right about people putting tags in nice cars. The Hellcats and Scat Packs of the Mopar community are getting tracked a lot.
Ultimate nightmare scenario: your bag with a tracker gets stolen, the thief finds and removes the tracker and places it in someone else's bag, the other person finds it and reports it to the police, who end up standing on your doorstep wanting an explanation.
When you bag gets stolen you go to AirTag Options and „tag“ it as stolen. so the next person „find“ the airtag he/she get anonymous data to call you. But yes I understand your Concern. There is no law for gadgets like this. C’est la vie
Why would a thief place a tracker they can't track without assigning it to their device, in someone else's bag?
@@paran0ia000 because it’s linked to the original AirTags owner… if a thief put it in another bag why would he want to track it?
@@bennn1346 he wouldnt the idea is to get the heat of himself and put it on you to stop any attempt to get back your shit
The real nightmare scenario is the thief killed someone and leave your Airtag on the corpse to plant "evidence" back on you
Now that is a true tech channel not just smartphones, you actually take the steps to tell people about tech it's advantages and shortcomings. 🔥🔥
Great Videos, Awesome Topics 🔥
I've been a fan for about a month and now I can not stop watching you. Keep it up!
Honestly its kinda scary that air tags work by communicating location information to random apple devices. This is straight out of my nightmares of if apple had complete control of the markets.
I actually recently got a notification on my iPhone myself about an unknown AirTag having been following for a while. This was after a international flight and I had gotten to my room, and for a moment I was terrified. I was already in another country alone for the first time and then I was told someone was using an apple product to track me. It didn’t help I knew hardly anything about air tags (apple isn’t doing a great job advertising the danger for apple users either). When it said to find the tag and contact the police, I did everything to try and find the tag slipped into my luggage or somewhere and couldn’t. Eventually I just thought I had to ignore it and it went away. Weeks later and I still don’t know what spurred it or what happened to it or if I’m still being tracked.
After watching MKBHD vid on the blue vs green checkmark debacle in regards to SMS and why people are social status on it in america, it really does rain in quite hard. They say around 70% of people between 18-24 have an iphone. Apple's grip on the phone market stateside is pretty tight here so yeah it is pretty insane
""Quality"" Apple products right there, try Samsung instead!
How did the airtag send you a notification about an unknown one? I had accidentally taken a friend's airtag instead of mine and nothing happened.
Same happened here when I got of the NYC subway. Got home and received a notification that I was being followed by an unknown device. I dumped everything I had on the bed looking for it, and later found that it was someone’s else AirTag that was on them going in a similar direction.
@@Defensive_Wounds Samsung smart tag is the same to air tags. The only difference is that airtag has larger network than samsung making it more accurate.
His videos are so well explained that I am in a kind of trance while watching his videos. Usually I get sick of a video in 10min but his videos are so engaging plus they are so awareness spreading which at times can save your life. Who agrees?
Tysm for the likes ;))
This guy makes me interested
I do. He has seamless and unpredicted transitions, text randomly appearing on screen, background lights to stimulate the eye, a quick and fast speech to keep our attention. It's like he took everything attention-grabbing, compelling, and interesting then threw them into one pot and stirred.
Ppl nowadays watch shorts most of the time
@@nikhilpranav6915exactly
Everyone
This is a brilliant way to make non apple users to buy apple products just to make them check for any airtags following you
Exactly what i think the reason apple made this
That’s creepy if it’s even remotely right
Creating a problem to sell solutions
Still not buying anything apple
That's kinda scary in a way, I own a android. But to actually realize I might be tracked and not know at all.
I love how he says “instead try to go got to a PLAYSTATION”
Tbh Airtags in themselves aren't bad - I find it useful to track my car without worry for a year about the battery and by backpack in case it gets lost or stolen. But as always it's people's fault something possibly good is used for bad things...
Yeah I keep one on my keys so I can find it around the house before I leave. My backpack. Car. Its just like cars. Just because people are running over others doesn’t mean cars should be illegal
@@toptiertech7291 then they should be registered like cars are.
I can easily get owners information using lisence plate. It should be same with air tags.
@Joe Not at all! It's a real threat that needs to be discussed and people need to be made aware. Also, Arun already asked the question in the video - Is it actually Apple's fault? And touched on Apple's security measures and their flaws, So he covered that, But then many people don't actually fully listen or watch a whole video before they comment. There's no need for Apple just to stop selling them, But it should be people's choice if they don't want to use them in certain situations, Or at all, AND to be aware of this stuff happening and take precautionary measures as Arun suggested - Which is helpful for many people.
@Joe apple shill detected 🤡🤡🤡
@Joe security measures my foot
Finally found someone who looks as both sides of the road. Love your content!!
Who is deez
I’m fairly security conscious. I also hardly ever use Bluetooth devices, so of course I always have my Bluetooth turned off to conserve battery.
You just answered the question as to why every iOS update since around 14,2 has force-enabled Bluetooth even without the user’s awareness and consent…
Not a good mark on Apple’s tab sheet, if you ask me!
AirTags don't use bluetooth
@@foamylemming3912 The video comes across to me as stating that AirTags use Bluetooth, and have an optional BT wideband mode that’s activated for precise location by a nearby device when required.
If I understand the inner workings correctly, an AirTag will broadcast its ID on a constant basis (Using BTLE this is very light on the battery) and any nearby Apple device - If it has BT enabled - Will forward that AirTag ID along with that devices present location to Apple and Find My. @Mrwhosetheboss might be able to clarify if this is indeed correct. :-)
If AirTags don’t employ Bluetooth, which radio communication standard *are* they employing?
One thing I can say - Hand on heart - Is that AirTags *aren’t* communicating directly with mobile/4G/5G or WiFi networks. There is no way an AirTag could use those means of communication and still get a years operation out of a CR2032 button cell! :-)
Even if people could turn off their Bluetooth it would ping off other people's iphones
Having location services on gives them consent
Did they have many good marks on their tab sheet in the first place?
I've had my AirTag stolen. The airtags are terrible if you want to track your devices because the batteries can be disconnected from the AirTag. So a thief can use to AirTag and track the person. If you do get an AirTag and use it as a key chain just make sure the apple AirTag cannot be opened.
The anti track feature does work after 24 hrs. I bought an airtag to track my own bike and I use an Android phone. I setup the air tag with my iPad and was already disappointed to find out iPad doesn't support UWB. On the 2nd day, the airtag keeps beeping when I use it to bike to classes. Although I was carrying my iPad with the Bluetooth on. I think the air tag thinks my android phone is being followed (the Bluetooth on my phone is also on) so it doesn't stop beeping until I remove the battery. I returned the airtag the following day. Definitely don't get an airtag if you're using an Android phone.
if you think about it then apple is being racist towards android
I didn't see it this way but now that I think of it, it kinda is. If tile can make it work across platform through an app, Apple probably can too.
Doesn't Samsung have their own tags though?
@@coolboss999 They do.
I'm planning to do this myself (also use an iPad and an Android phone), but my thinking is I'll remove the speaker altogether.
Man the effort put into those video. The editing. The plot. The execution. The jokes. All the stuff. Its a masterpiece. Its a dream
Thanks I never knew
This is so scary I didn’t know these mini devices can track people like that
Even cheaper ones can
You'd be surprised. People are wild, literally one video I saw there was hidden Cams everywhere in a hotel room, like 50 of them in every nook and cranny including inside the shower head.
"I didn't even know mini devices can track people like that"
bruh, this is just dumb. How can you not know any of this tracking stuff. Unless you are a kid or new to the internet.
Guess phones are scary now
Tbf everything can track you, it's just these apple airtag make it easier
It would be VERY simple to make the AirTag ping once each time the location is viewed (and/or add a vibration engine). This would help deter trackers tremendously. Also Apple is good at blocking third party repairs, seems to me they would be able to make it nearly impossible to unhook the speaker. If they wanted to live up to their privacy claims, they would offer free upgrades from original AirTags to AirTags 2, while removing all original AirTags from the system. The solutions are out there, if they would just do it.
The thing is that makes no sense, since your own AirTag isn't a threat to you there's no reason for them to put resources into it, and on the other hand also people who actually mean harm with this device are not interested at all in trading the security threat device they just bought for a device with more security features. The only real solution to this is fix as much threats as they and start selling only the updated version of this product
That second solution though would be HORRENDOUS for the environment though, for the average person would most likely just throw it away rather than recycle it properly (via a tech recycling center). Your first one though is also redundant, because like Arun said in the video, speaker-less AirTags are being sold, meaning that the feature would just be bypassed in the same way.
@@lucastillej0 Hence the need to block third party repairs. And to get a new AirTag, you would be required to return the old one. I just can’t stand to see the idea die, it is so handy, there are just a few bugs to be worked out.
This kind of ruins a significant use in the case of theft of a backpack or bag. I wouldn't upgrade, and thanks to the replaceable battery, I needn't to either.
@@Lauren_C You are correct there, hadn’t thought of that. My boss uses them to track his trucks, in the event one would be stolen, thing is, the AirTag may notify them if their using an iPhone after 8 hrs anyway. 😕
I currently have 4 of them and when I was leaving my 2 Timelapse Rigs out on location for days at a time I felt good that I could see every once in a while that it was still on location without a monthly subscription but I can see how bad this could be
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD...........
Basically Apple says “if you don’t have an iPhone then your android device will not be able to know when you’re being stalked”.
To anyone who calls me some “Android fan” or something accusing Apple, I’ve been using iPhone and Mac (I also have a super old iPad) without even considering Android or Windows for my whole (so far pretty short) life.
This guy literally goes straight to the point
loves this channel
This video is incredible 👏🏾👏🏾
Here before this blows up Imao
Same
This can be REALLY dangerous if used incorrectly. Imagine being stalked by someone and they happen och be able to pop one of these in your bag. If you loose the stalker and preceed to walk home, he will know the exact location of your house and will from there basically do whatever he wants….
FYI ...when your phone and AirTags in same bag your phone registered in a sec that AirTag ...
when you take your phone from your bag .....shows phone browser AirTag informations !
@@firstsoldier4257 That’s only for Apple though I think. Makes it extremely dangerous against anybody with an android.
@@PresidentShrubbery kk imma buy an iPhone real quick I'm shook
neat. get a gun. This has always been a threat, the only reason it's getting publicity now is because Apple is doing it and it's forcing people to realize how little agency they take in their own safety.
@@robonator2945 I think you’re forgetting that its hard to get a gun in many countries
Apps can keep work in terminated states, you need to use native language of the system. It's a huge security concern, and providers only support with their system. So you have to use firebase for ios to keep getting data from the device when it's closed. Similar android
Million Dollar Question, Who filmed the whole video after 1:04?
Lol
The hide and seek thing was filmed after and edited in when the video had already been fully recorded. When Arun is looking for Josh he's filming it himself. I may be right and may be wrong.
@@Anhua72 It was sarcasm dude😅
It is a million dollar question
Thanks for a very useful video. This is what we need - less "buy more tech" and more "here's what tech is up to" videos.
About 20 years ago I was a technician at a research company that was working on cutting edge tech for the time like wearable and tablet computers, video compression, ADSL and wireless networking. Most of the prototypes and products we used Apple has since made their own shiny white version and pretended it invented. A guy came there to give a talk about this concept of short range radio devices signal piggybacking on each other in a sort of physical cloud. Even back then my first thought was it was a terrible idea and would be an absolute security nightmare. And I was just thinking about the data being insecure, I didn't even consider the location tracking aspect. Crazy times.
This stuff's scary
A 60 year old lady was just killed a week ago because of an air tag. She used it to find her stolen car and when she confronted the thieves she was shot in the head.
To be fair that seems to be due to bad judgment. Once she found the thieves, she should have called the cops. Confronting the thieves directly was a terrible decision.
2:50 pretty sure it would just fall out due to the pressure from carbon monoxide coming from the engine
Ya I was about to say that
Exactly unless they’re fake on an electric car
While it's not Apple's fault their product is being used for unintended purposes, now that they know about the issue, it is their responsibility to do something. Just making the Android app better, and the notification process for Apple phones better, could go a long way to doing that.
They knew perfectly well this would happen but why should they care? Stalkers pay for their products like anyone else, and oh! Why not get a hidden tracker to put on your loved one so if they do get kidnapped by the Apple fueled Stalker, you can find their body later, now Apple have sold two trackers just like that.
They don't care at all, and these half measures will only fool idiots.
Taking a more pessimistic view of things, you could argue the point that Apple intentionally endangering people is a huge boon for iPhones. "It's the only device that warns you of the problem we created". Obviously, Apple isn't out there twirling their moustache that they've put people in danger, but if it brings a few extra dollars to their pockets as a result, they won't be complaining.
That's like saying it's on a hammer company to "do something" about a murderer using their hammer to commit murder. It's no one's fault or responsibility besides the malicious user's.
It is their fault for assuming the average device owner agrees to their device being used like this without their consent.
What's next using our device's to actively listen for criminal activity (I kept this to the broad term as induvial labels would likely sound like justifications for this invasion of privacy)
When such a device was created the existing device users should of been given a choice (the best I can assume is a T@C buried deep into the pages of reading saying the device will be used for more then personal use without the need for active consent)
Yeah sure so now as an android user I'll have a nifty app reporting my location non-stop to Apple servers. What a leap forward.
Anyway the hacking community is constantly breaking their Bluetooth protocols, it's coded like ass to the point it's even more detrimental to the honest user than anyone else.
After thinking about it, I think I've concluded that this device was pretty much developed /with/ surveillance in mind - for one reason and one reason only. If you think about it, Apple and Google have both been using "Find My Device" technology for years. Only there's a difference here. With Apple's Airtags, there's only a notification (the audible beep) when the tracking has stopped (the device being unattended for eight hours, for example). With Google's approach, notification is instant the moment the tracking /starts/.
All Apple needed to do was have it set so that when the user activates tracking, there is an auditory ping that notifies anyone in the area, "Hey, this device is being geolocated. Please help." Given that this device /already notifies other iPhone users of its existence anyway/, it would have only affirmed what Apple claimed they had been trying to do.
The lack of transparency by Apple about this technology is ultimately what is going to lead to this product being used as it was designed to be used.
that would be a good solution but it would just increase the amount of non speaker-airtags sold
@@Wratchedlol I was thinking of that too. And it's not even like they should outlaw or moderate silent trackers. They would be very useful in cases of theft of a item or vehicle and having a pinging sound every time they are tracked would just notify the thief they are being tracked. It's a weird caveat to think maybe people just can't be trusted with this kind of technology at all because they are inevitably going to abuse it.
The thing is, this isn’t new technology. Trackers have been used for years, the reason AirTags is making it into the news is that they have an “Anti-Tracking” software. Have they not done that, no one would be talking about it. Imagine all the things being tracked by Tile right now or Samsung SmartTag, because they don’t notify the user they are being followed, they technically are more dangerous.
@@markIrSa when there's a will there's a way, but there is something to be said about how popular apple products are and how easy it is to use so anybody can do it on a whim with no experience or research necessary.
Won’t work because no one cares what happens to you.
For example when most people hear a car alarm we just want it to stop. Like turn that shit off or steal that car faster
How do you learn to turn off the notification so the car thief doesn’t know an AirTag is following them??? Doesn’t that defeat the whole person?? You don’t WANT the thief to know they’re being followed!
Love how your production quality has improved so much!
Editing is top notch and the script is written with a high information:time ratio!
One of my favorite tech channels :)
3:38 Awesome transition
4:21 was the best 😂
8:18 look on the phone, it says…
He can’t help himself lol
6:06 did just see 2.2 star 🤔🤔🤔
the scariest part is not the airtag itself, but the way is works. I can own an apple product and dont want/ dont have airtags, that doesnt matter, my device will be used to track them. That is the thing that really scares me the most.
Why? Why should you be scared? The information just gets passed on, and no one can intercept it or track the source.
This guy is just fearbaiting y’all
@@alespic true. I can , from only hearing the video, understand why people gets scared over it tho.
@@vishnubharathit6192 it was almost definitely in the TOS, which he agreed to
You can optout by turning off findmy network in your phone settings
@@vishnubharathit6192 it is in the tos, and when an unfamiliar airtag is following you, your phone gets a notif
and for the real reason i’m here… to hear what pun was used during the video 3:43 😭🤣
Never been tracked
The fact that they're so small makes them very easy to conceal as well. Atleast Apple is aware of the problem. Hopefully they'll come with a good solution eventually.
No it good like this not true
they wont cuz thier moneygrabing methoods
@@gearsgamer7115 riiiight
Apple will come with a solution.
And then price of these tags will be 299$
@@kunal_221 they are not going to up the price, even if they do it wont be much
Two videos in this short span 🤞 arun is on fire 😂
Your videos nowadays are getting less-smartphone related, and I still love them. Been a fan for over 3 years. Great Videos with Interesting Topics
Copied comment word for word
Thank you for letting me know
this is a really cool informative video of the safety aspect of these tags, the major thing that shocked me is that the tags are so cheap for being an apple product, i didn't realise how good they were but i am a sucker for losing stuff so i think it might be a worthwhile investment for me
thats because we are born spiritually death ,the first humans rebelled against GOD and got cursed with death their body would die their spirit died and their soul would go to hell forever, alot of people died trough adam!, but GOD so loved the world that HE sent HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON that trough HIM alot of people can be saved from hell and gain everlasting life, and get spiritually alive! JESUS said if youre not BORN AGAIN trough water and SPIRIT you cannot enter the kingdom of GOD......
3:55 Nice one Rick
Almost any technology can be misused but the reason AirTags are being misused so much is that they work pretty darn well for their price. I'm surprised Apple's own internal review and marketing teams never thought to raise this issue.
I am pretty sure they did and I would gladly believe that one asshole might have even said "Well they should buy an iPhone to know who is tracking them"
@Joe how exactly? You will never know if you have an AirTag on you if you don’t own an iPhone. On Android you have to manually initiate a scan to know if there is an AirTag near you. Devices that run anything older than iOS14.5 will not be able to detect the AirTag and there is no alternative for those devices.
@Joe Way to put the burden to ordinary citizens than to push Apple to find a solution. Seems like airtag is much more concerning than robberies itself.
@@berryx8192 "You can just download the app so you can track airtags that may or may not be an issue."
"Nobody I trust has explicitly confirmed this niche issue, therefore it's not true."
"Don't want to get the app? Get a new iPhone. Surely you aren't poor enough to buy a new iPhone?"
"Not listening to your counterarguments, I muted you already lol.
Like, what the heck is wrong with Joe? It's like they're just blocking their ears and refusing to listen to anything.
@Joe yes bro I will open the app everytime I go out to see who is trailing me. Nice solution.
Ye it's pretty scary😢
8:43 Yahaha! You found me!
I’m happy that for the past two years he’s been branching to more tech Than smartphones, I loved the old content but the newer videos are just 👌
Congratulations you won 🔝message right away I have something for you 🆙
One fact that stopped Airtags criminal use is that they are actually quite expensive in some countries. Brazil, for example, has lots and lots of crime, but the 4 airtags pack costs as much as a minimum monthly wage here, so, not really worth it. Not only that, but nearly as much people here have iphones than in other parts of the world, so, airtags wouldn't be so accurate.
So, in subdeveloped countries using airtags to stalk people isn't really a concern, at least not for normal people.
" not for normal people" lol
Exactly that's what im saying. People are acting like that air tags are a actual threat. When normal trackers are cheaper and don't have any security precautions.
I have disconsidered buying an AirTag just because people here don't usually have iPhone and would make tracking impossible
@@hoover1150 there's a app on andriod phones that allows you to see air tags. The apps also by apple.
You can't call it "not sub developed country issue" because if Apple products were made affordable in all countries, then more people will have it. Its not the country's economy alone that determines the product cost.
Air Tags are very nice.
I like the timed circles on the left side, keeps the video clear and organized! Kudos to you and the editor and I feel that more people should do this
the exhaust bit at 3:08 wont work when having a nice car like a mclaren the exhaust would vibrate the air tag off
@♜ 𝐏𝐢𝐧𝐧𝐞𝐝 by Mrwhosetheboss the most realistic fake account icl
The one thing I was hoping to hear in this video is where does the responsibility fall on the person doing the tracking/stalking? We are quick to point to a manufacture yet slow to look at the person doing the shady act. Or does this fall into the category, at least here in the States, 'everyone has right. no one has responsibilities"
Apple has control over the AirTags, the cause of the problem. You can lock the offenders up, but only Apple can actually stop the tags from being used like this.
We're pointing at the manufacturer because pointing at the bad actor is pointless. Bad actors will always exist and the manufacturer is at fault for developing and releasing a product that is too easy to abuse.
@@theuncalledfor what about kitchen knives, baseball bats, crowbars, guns, cameras,ETC. there are so many items that can be used in a malicious manner. Like if someone uses a high zoom camera to snap pictures of someone on their homes, it is the manufactures fault. If someone stabs another person with a knife is it the knife manufacturer’s fault. Heck people can use computers to hack into your phone or pc to access your bank account, personal photos, etc.
Bad interpretation. All parties have rights AND responsibilities.
Cigarette companies have rights but also have the legal responsibility to warn the public…which they do.
Apple has the right to make such a product, but has the responsibility to make sure it does not cause harm in any capacity.
The second a murder or rape happens because of an AirTag, Apple is going to face serious consequences especially if the person in question had an Android device since there’s no way for them to know they are being followed. It’s a legislation against Apple’s walled garden waiting to happen, and it’s so avoidable.
@@RiseUpToYourAbility It’s Apple’s fault because they make no attempt in making the technology accessible for all users.
If Android had access to both use and detect (ideally baked into the OS) then Apple can sleep safely at night knowing they did everything they could to make sure the product is as safe as possible for the public. Lawsuits would be hard to counter that.
I’m sure Google would be more than happy to bake it into the software since it’s both a security issue waiting to happen and a huge benefit for their consumers to use AirTags.
Apple is the one that wants a walled garden, and is AOK if someone gets murdered, raped, or robbed for them to preserve their ecosystem superiority.
Their lack of attention on the Android side of things for a product that spy’s on you without even knowing it IS their fault. It’s only a matter of time until such a case happens and it goes to court.
Actually used one to track theives stealing mail from the post box.
Even if Arun made a 30 minutes video he would would not fail to entertain us. Thank You!
100% true
Was this video thought of before or after the collab with Tom Scott?
7:10 whose*
Not about the video really but if you go the to end of the video then look at the red line it says “Surfrock VPN”
5:11 Sooo smooth
Nice video you have put in here, you just nailed it.
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2:58 that's why I never have enough of this channel 😂
@♜ 𝐏𝐢𝐧𝐧𝐞𝐝 by Mrwhosetheboss bot
This channel is The Tech Theorists but The Tech Facts! I love it!
As someone with a fear of stalkers, this was a great thing to watch before bed... not.
Seriously though this was really informative, well worded and laid out. Thank you. You earned a subscription from me.
Love your videos Arun, there so organized and well presented, road to 10 million subscribers
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What a great video. I have just bought these for my dad and was interested to see how well they work. I myself am a Samsung fan and would love to see a video on the galaxy smart tags.
I didn't know these could have the battery removed. My friend had one put in her pocket when we were together. I ended up giving it the Dwayne Johnson (hitting it with a rock) treatment. If we had gotten back to my house I probably would have microwaved it.
Honestly this was no big deal for me. I'm a large man who has multiple firearms. But for a 5' (152cm) woman that is horrifying. She ended up spending the night in my guest room because she was scared to go home. I don't can't even blame her for it. This is an experience that shock my friend and it angers me to no end. Call me overly protective but someone doing this to anyone I care about makes me want to put my boot way up their butt hole. Like you need surgery to get it out deep.